News
Grain and soy markets are expected to open higher on support from concerns with U.S. weather and Black Sea grain supplies.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures traded solidly higher overnight on support from Russia halting the Black Sea grain deal and weather concerns.
Kerry in China | Russia halts grain deal | New USDA deputy secretary to be sworn in
Farmers National Company sites cooling in farmland market.
Access this week’s newsletter here.
WOTUS rule confusion | Sugar industry ruling | Protecting U.S. farmland | India rice trade
Grain futures are expected to open firmer this morning as traders watch weather and uncertainty with the Black Sea grain deal.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures traded on both sides of unchanged during the overnight session but have firmed and are near their highs this morning.
The World Board cut the corn yield projection due to extreme dryness through June. The soybean yield was left unchanged.
U.N. levers SWIFT in Black Sea Deal negotiations, Russia works to trade in local currencies and pork cutout values turn softer...
Dollar falls to lowest level since April 2022 | China’s trade woes continue | Calif.’s ‘Skittles’ bill
Soy complex futures are expected to lead a corrective rebound.
USDA reported net corn sales of 468,400 MT for 2022-23 and 470,800 MT for 2023-24, notably exceeding pre-report estimates.
Soybeans led a corrective rebound in the grain and soy markets overnight.
Corn and soybean basis are now both below the three-year averages.