World grain market: Wheat and corn fell, while soybeans maintained its growth on Monday

Published 2024년 11월 26일

Tridge summary

The wheat market saw a decline on November 25, 2025, due to improved U.S. crop conditions and a stronger dollar, influenced by President-elect Donald Trump's tariff announcements on imports from Canada, Mexico, and China. U.S. winter wheat planting was nearly complete with favorable conditions, while Russian wheat export forecasts were reduced. The USDA reported increased wheat and corn shipments, with Japan and Mexico as key destinations. Soybean futures rose slightly, supported by a weaker dollar and higher soybean meal prices, with significant exports to China. In Brazil, a drier week is expected for key regions, and commodity prices on the CBOT for December and January showed decreases in wheat, corn, and rice, while soybean prices increased. The price of rapeseed for January 2024 on the ICE is also noted.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The wheat market opened the new week lower on Monday, November 25, 2025, with wheat falling for a fourth session on improving U.S. crop conditions and a stronger dollar. Chicago Board of Trade soft winter wheat for December settled at $196.85 per ton, Kansas City hard winter wheat for December settled at $200.80 per ton, and Minneapolis hard spring wheat for December settled at $213.48 per ton. Chicago SRW futures for December settled at $5.35-3/4, down 8 ½ cents. Kansas City HRW futures settled at $5.46-1/2, down 7 ¾ cents. Minneapolis spring wheat settled at $5.81, down 5 cents. The dollar rose against its major counterparts after President-elect Donald Trump pledged to impose tariffs on all imports from Canada and Mexico, plus additional duties on imports from China. Commodity funds bought CBOT soybean and corn futures contracts on Monday, traders said. They were net sellers of wheat and soybean oil futures contracts and net sellers of soybeans. U.S. winter wheat planting was ...
Source: Zol

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