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Soybeans, corn stuck near 3-year lows on abundant supplies

Monday, 12 February 2024


CHICAGO, Feb 11 (Reuters): US corn and soybean futures hovered near three-year lows on Friday as South American crop weather improved and forecasts called for plentiful supplies, but losses were limited by short covering ahead of the weekend.
Both markets posted weekly declines, with soybeans notching an eighth straight drop and corn down for the eighth time in nine weeks.
Wheat futures were higher on bargain buying and short covering, and as the US dollar softened. But the market was lower in the week for the fifth time in six weeks.
Corn and soybean markets remained focused on supply and demand estimates released by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Brazil's Conab a day earlier.
Both reduced projections of Brazilian soybean and corn output in the light of recent drought. Consultancy Safras & Mercado also cut its Brazilian soy crop estimate on Friday.
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) March soybeans were down 10 cents at $11.83-1/2 per bushel, just above this week's low of $11.79-1/4, the weakest for a most-active contract since December 2020.
March corn was down 4-1/4 cents at $4.29 a bushel after hitting a contract low of $4.28-1/4. It was the lowest for a most-active contract Cv1 since December 2020.
CBOT March wheat rose 8-1/4 cents to $5.96-3/4 per bushel.