North American Grain and Oilseed Review:Big gains for canola

Sharp improvements in CBOT soybeans, soyoil

By Glen Hallick Glacier FarmMedia – Intercontinental Exchange canola futures closed stronger on Wednesday, riding the spillover from sharp increases in Chicago soybeans and soyoil. There was additional support from gains in MATIF rapeseed and Malaysian palm oil. Also, canola continued to benefit from Friday’s Canada-China trade deal and news that China bought 60,000 tonnes




ICE Canola Midday: Good spillover support from soybeans, soyoil

Uncertainty over Chinese import volumes

By Glen Hallick Glacier FarmMedia – Canola futures on the Intercontinental Exchange were higher on late Wednesday morning, gleaning spillover from upswings in Chicago soybeans and soyoil. Additional support came from increases in MATIF rapeseed and Malaysian palm oil. Meanwhile, crude oil was relatively steady, providing little direction to the vegetable oils. The Canada-China trade



Global Markets: Trump says Canada, Carney not grateful

By Glen Hallick Glacier FarmMedia | MarketsFarm – The following is a glance at the news moving markets in Canada and globally. As United States President Donald Trump spoke at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, he repeated his demand that Greenland be turned over to the U.S. Also, Trump accused Canada



ICE canola stronger Wednesday morning

Glacier FarmMedia — ICE canola futures were stronger Wednesday morning, finding spillover support from gains in outside markets. The Chicago soy complex, European rapeseed and Malaysian palm oil futures were higher. The reduction of Chinese tariffs on Canadian canola announced last week remained supportive. March canola was trading above most of its major moving averages,



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U.S. livestock: Cattle rally after screwworm scare

Chicago cattle made modest gains on Tuesday while lean hogs ended mixed to start a shortened trading week. Most-active April live cattle closed at 234.575 cents a pound, up 0.600 cents. February live cattle settled at 232.375 cents per pound, up 0.225 cents. Most-traded March feeder cattle contracts gained 1.225 cents to close at 357.675