Markets

Wheat flat; set for second weekly drop as US weather improves

  • Losses in the soybean market were curbed by South American crop worries.
Published March 12, 2021

SINGAPORE: Chicago wheat futures were little changed on Friday, with the market set for a second straight weekly decline as expectations of improved weather across the US Plains weighed on prices.

Soybeans lost ground and were on track to end the week with losses after climbing for the last four weeks. Corn fell and is poised for a second weekly drop.

"The upcoming rainfall to the US Hard Red Winter wheat regions, including the very western third, continues to weigh on prices," said Tobin Gorey, director of agricultural strategy at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.

The most-active wheat contract on the Chicago Board Of Trade (CBOT) has lost 1.6% this week, the second straight weekly loss. The market was unmoved at $6.42-1/2 a bushel by 0302 GMT.

Soybeans are down 1.3% for the week, their first weekly loss in five and the biggest slide in nearly two months. Corn is down 1.8%, its second straight weekly fall.

Weekend storms are set to soak the US Plains wheat belt, much of which has endured dry conditions for several months.

The region's winter wheat is just starting its key spring growth phase, when the crop's need for water increases.

Losses in the soybean market were curbed by South American crop worries.

The Buenos Aires Grains Exchange lowered its estimates of Argentina's soybean harvest to 44 million tonnes and its corn forecast to 45 million tonnes, below its previous forecasts of 46 million tonnes for each crop, citing dry conditions.

Commodity funds were net buyers of CBOT corn, soyoil and soybean futures contracts on Thursday and net sellers of wheat and soymeal futures, traders said.

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