- HEADLINES: Corn market scores new contract highs; Wheat retreats on Plains rain; China booking US soybeans.
- Chicago futures are sharply mixed at midday. Wheat futures are lower on the prospect of Plains rainfall next week, while corn futures have scored new rally highs in both old and new crop futures on the same rain delaying planting. And soybeans have rallied on fresh Chinese interest for US July forward soybeans from Sinograin. 3-5 cargoes of new crop US soybeans were sold thismorning. The volume of trade is well down from recent days as traders adjust risk heading into the weekend. Weather has become the dominant fundamental this week and that will now continue into mid-August. The US nor world can ill afford to lose a bushel of production and record tight US stock/use ratios for the summer row crops. We doubt that the selling of wheat/soyoil can be sustained amid tightening world supplies. US SRW wheat is close to becoming the world’s cheapest new crop wheat. The same can be said for soymeal prices relative to corn on a feed value measurement.
- Chicago brokers estimate that funds have sold 4,800 contracts of wheat and 3,900 contracts of soyoil. Funds have bought 5,900 contracts of corn, 3,200 contracts of soybeans and 2,700 contracts of soymeal. Profit taking in the oil/meal spread and wheat/corn spreads is being felt today.
- The USDA did not announce any daily export sales today. China purchased as many as 10 cargoes of Brazilian soybeans for June shipment yesterday, with the US Gulf back to being competitive from July forward. There are indications that China continues to seek US new crop corn on Chicago weakness.
- We estimate that US farmers through Sunday will have planted some 18-19% of their 2022 corn and 12-14% of their soybean intentions. Last year 42% of the US corn crop was seeded through Sunday with the 10-year average being 33%. US corn seeding will continue to badly lag with 4 or more potent storm systems to pass through the Central US in the next 12-14 days. We hear that based on the cold weather forecast for next week, that growers concentrated more on planting soybeans rather that corn. The bigger seeding gains on Monday will be in soybeans.
- At least half of the world will be celebrating an extended weekend based on the May Day holiday. Also, China and a large share of SE Asia will be out through Wednesday for their Golden Week Celebration. This will limit Chicago volume early next week and produced some selling in Paris wheat on the close.
- The US Central Bank will be meeting next week and raising their lending rate by 0.5-0.75% on May 4. The increase has been well telegraphed, with US equity futures trading violently on the repricing of risk relative to bond yields. Rising inflation throughout the rest of the world has the flows of funds heading into raw material markets. New corn fund buying was witnessed this morning.
- E Midwest cash soybean cash bids are bid $0.05-0.15 higher via crushers seeking June forward supplies. With cash crush margins at +$2.80, the big risk to a US crusher is not having enough supply to keep the plant operating at 95% of capacity. US farmers are nearly sold out of old crop soybeans, and crushers and exporters will keep driving up their cash bid to uncover supply.
- The midday GFS weather forecast offers an active jet stream and 3 storm systems for the Central US in the next 10 days, with a fourth indicated in the 11–15-day period. Cool/wet weather persists with 10-day rainfall totals from the Northern Plains into Missouri and east to Ohio ranging from 1.50-4.50”. Rainfall totals for the W Plains were reduced as the systems were further east and south. Key for next week’s Chicago price is the location and amounts of rain. Midwest planting delays to not afford record yields with a yield drag in corn after May 10 and in soybeans after May 20.
- Crush demand for June/July/August soybeans is on the rise as exporters and domestic users fight for supply. The coming cool/wet Central US weather slows seeding, while offering needed rain for Plains HRW. Yet, record heat yesterday really took it out of the HRW wheat crop. Adverse US/Brazilian weather and the ongoing Russian war is bullish of grain. Corn should be the upside leader on Midwest planting delays.
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