U.S. grains: Chicago grains and oilseeds fall as Black Sea, China headlines assessed

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Reuters
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Chicago | Reuters – Chicago grains and oilseeds fell on Monday in thin holiday season trade, as market players weighed how markets would be affected by news from Russia, Ukraine and China, according to analysts.

There were positive signals from talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to end the war in Ukraine over the weekend. But those signals could be undermined by Russian claims on Monday that Ukraine had tried to attack Russian President Vladimir Putin’s residence in northern Russia. Ukraine called the accusation a lie meant to undermine the peace talks.

An end to the war in Ukraine would be bearish for wheat markets as removal of war risk insurance for shipping would make exports cheaper, while more Ukrainian ports could be available for wheat shipments.

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Chinese agriculture ministry officials called for an increase in yields of grain and oil crops and an improvement in the self-sufficiency rate of soybean oilseeds. Photo: John Greig

China vows to stabilize grain production, increase soybean oilseed self-sufficiency

Chinese officials have vowed to stabilize grain production and increase soybean oilseed production capacity, readouts of agricultural policy meetings showed on Tuesday, as Beijing seeks to reduce imports and ensure food security.

Also on Monday, China launched extensive war games around Taiwan to show Beijing’s ability to cut off the island from outside support in a conflict, testing Taipei’s resolve to defend itself and its arsenal of U.S.-made weapons.

That flash point poses a threat to the U.S.-China trade truce, said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist at StoneX.

“While China has been buying a lot of soybeans, they haven’t taken shipment yet, so commodity trading with China becomes a risk,” he said.

Trading remained light after the Christmas holiday. As the end of the year approached, many traders booked profits and exited the market.

“In thinly traded market conditions, this is how the market is reacting to those geopolitical stories,” Suderman said.

The Chicago Board of Trade’s most active wheat contract Wv1 settled 6 cents lower at $5.13 per bushel. Soybeans Sv1 ended 9 cents lower at $10.63-1/2 a bushel. Corn Cv1 finished down 7-3/4 cents at $4.42-1/4 per bushel.

-Additional reporting by Michael Hogan in Hamburg, and Daphne Zhang, Ella Cao and Lewis Jackson in Beijing.

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