The shaky situation in Ukraine pushes global grain prices higher

게시됨 2022년 3월 21일

Tridge 요약

On March 21, 2022, the agricultural market experienced significant volatility, with prices for corn, soybeans, and wheat increasing due to concerns over Ukraine's export capacity and questions about its spring planting capabilities. This surge was influenced by geopolitical risks in the Black Sea Region and weather conditions in the U.S. and Brazil. Meanwhile, China is planning to release 1 million metric tons of its state potash reserves to address domestic supply issues. Additionally, India is exploring potential wheat exports to several countries, including Egypt, Israel, Oman, Nigeria, and South Africa, despite being a minor exporter. South Korea has also purchased 1.7 million bushels of milling wheat from the U.S.
면책 조항: 위의 요약은 정보 제공 목적으로 Tridge 자체 학습 AI 모델에 의해 생성되었습니다.

원본 콘텐츠

Monday was yet another session that saw significant volatility - this time swinging back into farmers’ favor after a wave of technical buying today. Worries over Ukraine’s export capacity and doubts about the country’s ability to plant crops this spring returned to the forefront, causing double-digit gains for corn, soybeans and wheat. Corn firmed 2% higher, with soybeans up around 1.5%. Wheat contracts were variable, ranging between 2.25% and 5%. The first day of Spring was yesterday, and the season may indeed come in like the proverbial lion - a storm raking through the southern U.S. this week could deliver tornadoes, damaging winds, hail and floods. Further out, NOAA’s 8-to-14-day outlook predicts more seasonally wet weather for most of the Midwest and Plains between March 28 and April 3, with warmer-than-normal conditions prevalent across the Great Plains next week. On Wall St., the Dow started Monday’s session with moderate gains, only to tumble 271 points lower in afternoon ...

더 깊이 있는 인사이트가 필요하신가요?

귀사의 비즈니스에 맞춤화된 상세한 시장 분석 정보를 받아보세요.
'쿠키 허용'을 클릭하면 통계 및 개인 선호도 산출을 위한 쿠키 제공에 동의하게 됩니다. 개인정보 보호정책에서 쿠키에 대한 자세한 내용을 확인할 수 있습니다.