U.S. grains: Soy tumbles as U.S. rain forecast offers relief

By 
Reuters
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: July 26, 2024

(Medioimages/Photodisc/Getty Images)

Chicago | Reuters—Chicago Board of Trade soybean and corn futures plunged on Friday but were set for weekly gains, as weather forecasts indicated positive news for crops in the central United States.

Wheat dipped again as strong U.S. spring wheat projections and cheap prices offered by Black Sea exporters outweighed the impact of rain delaying and damaging west EU harvests.

“We’re seeing the bull conviction that we had here through the early part of the week just not able to carry through and extend the recovery rally in front of the weekend,” said Terry Linn of Linn & Associates.

Read Also

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency set total 2026 biofuel obligations at 26.81 billion RINs and the 2027 obligation at 27.02 billion RINs. Photo: Getty Images Plus.

U.S. finalizes biofuel blending quotas for 2026-27, cuts RINS for foreign feedstocks

The Trump administration on Friday finalized new biofuel blending volumes mandates for the U.S. oil refiners, requiring more of the fuels made from corn and other agricultural products than initially proposed,in an apparent win for U.S. farmers.

Chicago Board of Trade most-active soybeans Sv1 fell 25-1/2 cents to $10.54 per bushel at 1211 CDT (1511 GMT).

Corn Cv1 was down 8-3/4 cents to $4.12 a bushel while wheat Wv1 fell 10-1/2 cents to $5.27-1/4 a bushel.

Hot, dry weather forecasts for the U.S. Midwest have lost the consistency that supported corn and soybeans earlier this week, according to analysts.

On Thursday, the Commodity Weather Group said up to 20 per cent of the U.S. corn crop is likely to be stressed in the next two weeks, but more rain is now forecast in U.S. crop belts next week – welcome news for corn and soybeans.

“We are lacking a definable weather story here at the moment,” said Linn.

“At the same time, we’ve seen some cash movement that has helped to tap the brakes on the rally,” he said.

He added that a weaker energy trade was also a negative influence.

In wheat, Linn said favorable U.S. harvest prospects including record yield projections coming from the annual North Dakota spring wheat tour, pressured the market.

“This is the first year in several that we haven’t had any material drought and it’s showing in these yield expectations, he said.

—Additional reporting for Reuters by Michael Hogan in Hamburg and Peter Hobson in Canberra

About the author

Reuters

Freelance Contributor

explore

Stories from our other publications