Business & Finance

Wheat climbs on Black Sea dryness

Wheat rallies on reports of Russian crop damage Corn eases after three-day gains with oil, soybeans Soybe
Published May 20, 2020
  • Wheat rallies on reports of Russian crop damage
  • Corn eases after three-day gains with oil, soybeans
  • Soybeans climb as market awaits more signs of Chinese imports

CHICAGO: Chicago wheat futures gained on Wednesday as dryness in Russia and a weak crop outlook across the Great Plains lifted the market.

Soybeans gained as the Brazilian currency gained against the US dollar, renewing hopes of China buying, while corn was flat as demand gains in ethanol and animal feed offset ahead-of-pace planting.

The most-active wheat contract on the Chicago Board of Trade climbed 15-1/4 cents to $5.14 a bushel at 12:00 p.m. (1700 GMT), after touching a two-month low on Monday.

CBOT corn was down 1-1/2 at $3.19-3/4 a bushel, while soybeans added 5-1/4 to $8.47-3/4 a bushel.

Wheat prices had slumped as European rain gave hope to drought-stricken crops, but persistent dryness in the Black Sea region offered support. A decline in US winter wheat crop ratings last week and below-expected crop outlook during a Kansas wheat tour this week also buoyed the market.

"This spring's drought did irreversible damage," said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist for INTL FCStone, noting that Russian crop conditions move the US market more than its own crop outlook.

He said the rally was the result of a pile on among traders.

"As the chart signals turned, momentum traders grabbed a hold and amplified the move," he said.

Soybeans gained ground as China turns from Brazilian purchases to the US

"In the currencies, the real is up a bit, the dollar is down," said Jack Scoville, vice president of The Price Futures Group. "Brazil is running out of beans."

Corn, extensively used in ethanol fuel in the United States, lifted overnight, with recovering oil markets, but was mostly flat during midday trading amid strong spring planting progress.

US farmers have made faster than normal progress in planting what is expected to be a huge corn acreage this year.

 

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