In Europe and America last week, there were essentially price declines in the commodity markets. In Chicago, wheat was 0.5 percent cheaper, corn 0.6 percent, soybeans 2.9 percent, and rapeseed 5 percent cheaper. In Europe, the price of milling wheat increased by 2.5 percent, but corn was 0.4 percent, feed wheat 0.1 percent, and rapeseed 1.4 percent cheaper. The Brazilian real fell 2.7 percent against the US dollar, raising concerns among analysts that it could affect the demand for US grain exports. Additionally, there is concern that the decline of the real against the dollar will prompt Brazilian farmers to sell more of their crops, which in turn will affect global corn and soybean prices, said Charlie Sernatinger, an analyst at Marex. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that 462,000 tons of soybeans were sold to China for shipment in the 2025/26 marketing year. This is the first announcement of a flash sale of soybeans to China in a week, but it ...
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