Grains and oilseeds are higher on Thursday following the overnight session. The U.S. dollar is steady but is trading near its recent highs and holding its uptrend. Crude oil is higher. Stock futures are sharply higher for a second day.
CORN
March corn is up 1.25 cents at $4.42 ¾. New crop December corn is up 1.25 cents at $4.64.
March futures traded 8 cents lower on Wednesday to $4.41 ½, with prices testing the bottom end of their trading range of $4.40. So far, that level has held overnight, but a break below support is still possible.
The USDA’s latest export sales report for the week ending Oct. 2 showed a strong week of corn sales, with the bulk of the sales reported for key buyers Japan, Mexico, and South Korea.
S&P Global Energy said it expects U.S. farmers to plant less corn next spring. Acreage could fall 3.8 percent to 95 million acres, while soybean plantings could increase by 4 percent to 84.5 million acres.
SOYBEANS
January soybeans are up 5.50 cents at $11.41 ¾. New crop November soybeans are 2.25 cents higher at $11.21 ¾. Soybean oil extended losses overnight. Soybean meal traded higher.
Soybeans fell a sharp 17.25 cents lower yesterday despite news of more confirmed soybean purchases from China.
The USDA confirmed this morning that China bought another 462,000 MT of soybeans from the U.S. That brings their confirmed total to 1.82 MMT, just 15 percent of the 12 MMT the White House says China would buy before the end of the year.
Soybean oil futures traded sharply lower leading up to the afternoon after Reuters reported that the EPA could delay implementing a provision in its final RVO rule that would disadvantage imported feedstocks in biofuel production.
The exclusion of imported feedstocks from getting the full value of a blending credit would have, in theory, boosted domestic soybean oil demand. We are still waiting on the final rule to see the next direction for domestic biofuel policy.
WHEAT
March Chicago wheat is up 5.50 cents at $5.55. KC wheat is up 3.75 cents at $5.35 ½.
The wheat complex traded sharply lower yesterday, with Chicago futures losing 9.50 cents. Prices are so far holding onto their weekly gains despite trading below their highs. The 100-day moving average continues to be a level that has contained price moves.
The USDA confirmed that China bought 132,000 MT of white wheat. That confirms the buying that was initially rumored to have taken place earlier this month.
A cutoff low system is expected to dump soaking rains in the Southern Plains and mid-South later today.
China has been reportedly buying more wheat from Russia. Interfax reported that Russian wheat exports increased sharply in October. Still, China’s wheat imports are running at a nine-year low.
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PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. FUTURES TRADING INVOLVES SUBSTANTIAL RISK AND IS NOT SUITABLE FOR ALL INVESTORS.


























