US MIDDAY: Soyabeans, corn slump

19 Feb, 2021

CHICAGO: US corn and soyabean futures retreated on Thursday after the Department of Agriculture (USDA) projected that US farmers would devote more acres to the two crops this spring than any year on record. Wheat futures, meanwhile, climbed to the highest level in 2-1/2 weeks on rallying European wheat prices, a weaker dollar and concerns about US winter crop damage due to frigid weather across the wheat belt.

Corn and soya extended earlier declines after the USDA forecast 2021 corn plantings at 92 million acres and soyabeans at 90 million acres at the agency’s annual Ag Outlook Forum, which would be the largest-ever combined plantings for the two crops. The corn acreage projection was slightly below trade expectations, while soyabean acreage was a bit above.

Positioning ahead of the USDA’s broader supply-and-demand estimates, due to be released early on Friday, further pressured corn and soya.

“Historically, those (corn) acres have been low compared with final acres over the last 15 years. Soyabean acres were above what the trade thought,” said Don Roose, president of US Commodities.

Chicago Board of Trade March soyabean futures were down 11 cents at $13.72-3/4 a bushel at 12:13 p.m. CST (1813 GMT), while March corn fell 4-3/4 cents to $5.48-1/4 a bushel.

CBOT March wheat climbed 14 cents to $6.58 a bushel, following strong gains in Euronext wheat and worries about US winter wheat damage due to severely cold temperatures.

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