US: Weather concerns propel corn, soybeans, wheat

Published 2021년 6월 1일

Tridge summary

Soybeans, corn, and wheat markets experienced gains due to fund and technical buying, amid concerns over hotter, drier weather conditions that could impact crops. The USDA expects tight supplies for the upcoming marketing years, with 84% of soybeans and 95% of corn planted as of now. Oleoresin complex prices were also influenced by demand and the smaller U.S. crop size. Meanwhile, global crop conditions are generally positive, except for dry areas in Russia. Russia is set to introduce a new export tax scheme on Wednesday.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Soybeans were solidly higher on fund and technical buying but ending the session closer to the day’s lows than the highs. Most forecasts have hotter, drier conditions in many key U.S. growing areas extending into mid-month. That will likely cause at least some stress to developing crops and puts the early production projections in some jeopardy. There were also reports of frost damage over the weekend in parts of the Midwest. The USDA expects historically tight supplies this and next marketing year, which starts September 1st. The USDA says 84% of U.S. soybeans are planted, compared to 75% a week ago and the five-year average of 67%, with 62% emerged, compared to 41% last week and 42% on average. Soybean meal and oil were supported by demand and the fundamental implications of a smaller than expected U.S. crop. The USDA says April’s soybean crush was 170 million bushels, down 18 million on the month and 13 million bushels on the year. Weekly export inspections were down on the ...

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