CORN
- Corn is trading slightly higher this morning but remains in a very tight trading range. Brazil is expecting lighter rains over the next few days which could add some weather premium.
- Today the Federal Reserve will begin its two-day meeting in which it will decide on what to do with interest rates. Expectations are that rates will end up unchanged.
- Scattered showers are forecast in South America through the 19th when heavier rains should pick back up, but the next 7 days should give southern Brazil which is too wet a break from more moisture.
- Shipments of U.S. corn are 30% higher than last year’s pace with over half of the total shipments to Mexico, and U.S. corn remains the cheapest option.
SOYBEANS
- Soybeans are trading slightly higher this morning after big gains yesterday that saw a 32-cent jump in January soybean prices. Both soybean meal and oil are higher as well.
- A short-term hot and dry forecast in Brazil has lent some support to both corn and soybeans, but conditions are expected to turn favorable again in 7 days.
- Soybean planting in Brazil is 91% complete as of December 7 which compares with 85% the previous week and 95% a year earlier.
- Stockpiles of Malaysian palm oil fell last month for the first time since April on lower output. The decrease in production was larger than the decline in exports.
WHEAT
- All three wheat classes are trading higher this morning after yesterday’s selloff that was likely caused by fund selling. Purchases from China last week caused short covering.
- The Russian government has banned durum wheat exports until May 31st in order to stabilize prices domestically, but this may indicate that they are beginning to run low on supplies.
- Winter wheat conditions in the U.S. are mostly in better shape than last year with the good to excellent rating at 39%, but last week that rating rose by 8 points.
- In France, soft wheat plantings for the 2024 year fell by 5% with producers only planting 6.4m hectares of winter grains for the upcoming harvest.