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US grains

Corn, soybeans face bearish pressure on hefty supplies

Saturday, 10 August 2024


Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) corn futures fell on Thursday, and soybean futures set new life-of-contract lows, as U.S. farmers scramble to sell their bins of old-crop grain and oilseeds into a global market awash in supplies, traders said, reports Reuters.
Meanwhile, Chicago wheat futures spent much of the day higher on renewed signs of weather damage to European crops, but ultimately ended the day lower - following corn and soybeans, they said.
CBOT's most-active wheat contract Wv1 ended down 3/4-cent at $5.37-1/2 per bushel. CBOT soybeans Sv1 ended 10-1/2 cents lower at $10.08-1/4 a bushel, while corn Cv1 fell 3-3/4 cents to $3.97 a bushel.
Some market participants said they were watching for impacts of the oilseed workers strike in Argentina, after the number of ships facing grains loading delays rose to 36 on Thursday.
Others focused on adjusting their positions ahead of Monday's global supply-and-demand report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which many traders expect to forecast a massive U.S. harvest this fall even as Chinese demand this summer has cooled.
This over-supply perspective was reinforced early on Thursday, when traders began circulating a month-old USDA research report about flood damage to Midwestern cropland - which sent corn and soybeans falling as the damaged area appeared small, three market analysts told Reuters.
The report stated that, in this area, an estimated 70,000 corn acres and 46,000 soybean acres were affected.