Chicago Close: Soybeans Steady; Corn Slightly Higher 


Corn and soybean futures rebounded from earlier losses to close steady to higher on Thursday, while wheat was mainly lower. 

Soybeans saw early pressure from trade worries, after US President Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened US imports of Chinese cooking oil as retribution for China switching its soybean buying away from the US and to South America instead. However, the market worked its way back to unchanged as today’s NOPA crush report was considered positive. The NOPA report showed 197.86 million bu of US soybeans crushed during September, well above the 186.34 million bu average trade estimate. November and January beans settled steady at $10.06 ½, and $10.24 ¼, respectively. 

Corn moved higher as reports of slow US farmer selling offered support. December was up 3 ¾ cents at $4.16 ¾, and March was 3 cents higher at $4.32 ¼. 

Heavy global supplies continued to overhang wheat, with weak demand adding to the downside. December Chicago lost 1 ½ cents to $4.98 ¾, and December Kansas City dropped a ¼ cent to $4.88 ¼. December Hard Red Spring managed a 1-cent gain to $5.26 ¼, but December Minneapolis slipped 2 ½ cents to $5.51. 




Source: DePutter Publishing Ltd.

Information contained herein is believed to be accurate but is not guaranteed by the parties providing it. Syngenta, DePutter Publishing Ltd. and their information sources assume no responsibility or liability for any action taken as a result of any information or advice contained in these reports, and any action taken is solely at the liability and responsibility of the user.