USA: Wheat, corn and soybeans fell sharply on Monday

Published 2024년 7월 16일

Tridge summary

On July 15, 2024, the wheat market saw a significant decline with futures for various types of wheat falling across major exchanges. U.S. soybean futures also dropped to a nearly four-year low due to favorable crop conditions and demand concerns. The U.S. winter wheat harvest was 71% complete, and spring wheat conditions improved. Export inspections showed increased wheat and corn shipments, with Mexico being a major buyer. Analysts raised forecasts for wheat production in Russia and corn production in Brazil, while Argentina's wheat harvest is expected to be lower. Corn futures fell due to expected rainfall in the U.S. corn belt, and soybean futures ended lower with declines in soybean meal and oil contracts. As of July 14, 51% of U.S. soybeans were flowering, and 18% had set pods, with the condition rating at 68% good/excellent. The USDA reported that soybean exports for the week ending July 11 were up 4.8% from the same week last year but down 42.7% from the previous week, with Mexico being the main destination.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

On Monday, July 15, 2024, the wheat market declined again. At the end of the trading day, September quotations of soft winter wheat on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange CBOT fell to $195.66 per ton, September futures of hard winter wheat KCBT in Kansas City - to $204.11 per ton, September futures of hard spring wheat MGEX in Minneapolis fell to - $213.39 per ton. The wheat market resumed its free fall on Monday, with contracts falling by double digits on most exchanges. Chicago September futures ended the day down 18-1/4 cents. Kansas City contracts fell 12-1/4 cents at the close. Minneapolis spring wheat futures fell 16-¾ cents. Wheat futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange fell to their lowest levels over the life of the contract, and corn futures also declined. U.S. soybean futures fell to their lowest level in nearly four years on Monday amid strong crop prospects in the Midwest and worries about demand for oilseeds. Analysts believe the US crop benefited last week from the ...
Source: Oilworld

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