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Soybean prices vary in Brazil; see where the price has gone up

Published Mar 21, 2025

Tridge summary

The Brazilian soybean market saw mixed prices due to a rising dollar and negative trends in the Chicago Stock Exchange. Despite business opportunities, trade volumes remained moderate. According to Safras & Mercado, significant volumes were traded in Brazil. The uncertainty of Tariffs, weak export results, and ample South American supply have limited the market's reaction. Meanwhile, China's soybean imports from the US have surged in the first two months of 2025, compensating for the drop in Brazilian imports due to planting delays. U.S. net soybean exports for the 2024/25 season totaled 352,600 tons, with China leading the imports.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The Brazilian soybean market had mixed prices this Friday (21). The dollar rose while the Chicago Stock Exchange operated in the negative field, with low liquidity. Despite some business opportunities, no large volumes were reported, with trading remaining moderate. According to the consulting firm Safras & Mercado, volumes were traded in Brazil throughout the week, with premiums supporting the physical market scenario. Soybean futures contracts traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CBOT) closed Thursday with mixed prices. On a volatile day and after four consecutive sessions of losses, the market attempted a technical recovery, but the movement did not find strength. The uncertainty regarding the Trump administration's tariffs, the weak result of weekly exports and the ample supply from South America limited the reaction. Agents continue to position their portfolios, awaiting the US planting intention report, which will be released on the 31st. China's soybean imports ...
Source: CanalRural

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