Wheat, corn, soya consolidate after earlier gains

19 Sep, 2021

CHICAGO: Chicago soyabeans, corn and wheat eased on Friday as the markets consolidated after earlier gains, pressured by a continuing American harvest and limited exports at hurricane-damaged US Gulf export terminals.

The most-active soyabean futures on the Chicago Board of Trade fell 12 cents to $12.84 a bushel, ending the week down 2-1/2 cents, despite gains earlier in the week.

CBOT corn futures settled 2-1/4 cents lower at $5.27-1/4 a bushel, though it ended the week 1.93% higher, its first positive week since Aug. 27.

CBOT wheat futures ended 4-1/4 cents lower at $7.08-3/4 a bushel, though it added 20-1/4 cents for the week, a 2.9% climb.

Soyabeans led the complex lower, as favourable weather indicates strong harvest progress through the weekend, while exports remain capped by terminals on the US Gulf Coast that continue to struggle with power outages and hurricane damage as the country heads into its busiest export season.

“The export picture is not favourable right now, until we get those exports at the Gulf moving up,” said Mike Zuzolo, president of Global Commodity Analytics. “It’s a very crucial two weeks, because it’s our prime selling.”

Wheat offered support, unaffected by harvest pressure, though Australia’s second consecutive bumper crop nears harvest, which could ease tight global supplies.

Attention shifted to supply risks this week after a lower-than-expected official estimate of Canada’s drought-affected harvest, as well as reduced estimates of French and European Union crops and expectations for a fall in winter wheat sowings in Russia.

“We’ve already seen considerable strength,” said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist at StoneX. “Wheat is taking the opportunity to do a little profit-taking of its own.”

Corn losses were limited as harvest yields in parts of the Eastern corn belt have lagged expectation, Suderman added.

“That was the region we were counting on to make up for losses in the Northwestern belt, where drought was a problem this summer,” he said. “Yields have been coming in a little below expectations.

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