World markets for grains and oilseeds

Published 2024년 11월 27일

Tridge summary

Soybean futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange fell due to potential tariffs from President-elect Donald Trump and good weather in South American soybean-growing regions. However, the decline was offset by a rise in soybean oil futures due to the prospect of using more domestic soybean oil in biofuels. Wheat futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange rose due to a technical jump, despite U.S. winter wheat crops improving and some participants covering short positions before the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday. The EU exported 9.15 million tonnes of soft wheat from July 1 to Nov. 24, a significant decrease from the same period last year.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Soybean futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange fell on Tuesday after President-elect Donald Trump threatened tariffs on major trading partners. Good weather in soybean-growing regions of South America also weighed on prices, traders said. Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, said Monday he would impose a 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico and outlined an additional 10% tariff on imports from China. The decline in soybean prices was offset by a rise in soybean oil futures. Chicago soybean oil futures rose as tariffs raised the prospect of using more domestic soybean oil in biofuels, traders said. Wet weather is expected to ease concerns about a drought in the South American soybean crop. January soybean futures on the CBOT fell 2.5 cents to $9.83.5 a bushel. The most-active CBOT January soybean oil futures contract closed up 1.38 cents at $42.71 a pound. The most-active CBOT January soybean meal futures contract settled down $4.50 at $291.40 a short ton. Soybeans are ...
Source: Oilworld

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