Slight price increases on the produce markets in the EU and the US

Published 2023년 2월 18일

Tridge summary

The article reports a rise in produce prices in both international and European markets at the end of the week. There were minimal price increases in Chicago for wheat, corn, soybeans, and rape. The market's movement was attributed to the American weekend and contrasting crop prospects in South America. The strengthening dollar and falling crude oil prices also influenced the price increase. The upcoming USDA's annual meeting is anticipated to provide the agency's preliminary forecasts for 2023 plantings and production of major US crops. In Europe, all four priority agricultural products saw an increase in price.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The week ended with price increases on the produce markets both overseas and in Europe. There were no spectacular movements in Chicago, wheat by 0.2 percent, corn by 0.4 percent, soybeans by 0.1 percent, while rape also became more expensive by 0.1 percent than on Thursday. In Europe, the courses of all four priority agricultural products, mill wheat, corn, rapeseed and fodder wheat, also closed in the red. Corn, soybean and wheat futures in Chicago edged up slightly on Friday as traders hedged their short positions on lower speculation ahead of the US three-day long weekend. Markets overseas do not open on Monday. According to analysts, the American weekend and the opposite crop prospects experienced in South America moved the market. Uncertainty about the future of the Black Sea grain export corridor also underpinned the slight price increase, while the strengthening dollar and the drop in crude oil prices limited the rise in prices. Corn and soybean futures were otherwise lower ...
Source: AgroForum

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