News
Corn and soybeans are expected to open slightly firmer. Wheat will continue to struggle to find buyers.
Corn, soybeans and wheat faced light selling pressure during a relatively quiet overnight session.
Letter stresses production agriculture, Title I, and importance of funding farm safety net
Farmers’ perspectives regarding both current conditions on their farms and their expectations for the future both weakened slightly.
Crop stress continues in Argentina, China imports record soybean shipments in 2023 and NY Fed says pandemic supply chains have returned to pre-pandemic function...
Corn and soybeans are expected to open under light pressure, while wheat is anticipated to be mixed.
Fed Chair Powell testifies before Senate Banking panel, but data will speak louder
Corn, soybean and wheat futures traded narrowly on both sides of unchanged in a lightly traded overnight session.
USDA reported weekly export inspections for week ended March 2, which showed corn inspections notably above pre-report expectations, while wheat and soybean inspections each missed the low-end pre-report range.