- July corn falls to support at $4.25; Weather woes impact EU/Canadian crops; GFS midday weather forecast adds unwanted rain to NW Midwest.
- It was a down and dirty morning in Chicago with managed money adding to their net short grain positions. Seasonal price patterns turned negative in mid June and the breakdown in the charts caused a new round of speculative selling.
- Midwest cash basis levels gained on the decline with the July/November soybean spread pushing out to $0.49/bu premium while the July/September corn spread trades between $0.05-0.06/bu September premium. Elevator managers report that at least half of their farmers have chosen to roll long July corn futures positions forward to September to give the market time to assess the Midwest July weather pattern. Corn crops are largely made or lost during July. The next 6 weeks of weather is highly important to corn yield with temperature being a key ingredient.
- The weekly corn chart appears to be forming a right shoulder of a head and shoulders formation. Key will be corn price direction following the USDA report with traders betting on a bearish seeding and stocks total from NASS.
- The USDA reported the sale of 228,000 mt of US soymeal to the Philippines for the 2024/25 marketing year.
- Canadian and EU farmers both need heat and drier weather conditions in the coming weeks to advance crop maturity. Both Canada and the EU are forecast to endure more rain/cool to mild temperatures into July 4. The cool/wet spring has pushed crop maturity backwards with the French wheat harvest not expected to start on mass until the second week of July. Following a latent spring seeding campaign, Canadian crops are also behind normal in development. The northerly displaced jet stream will maintain wet flows across Canada/the EU for another 10 days. Key for the EU is the quality of the EU wheat crop. Yield could also be down due to persistent rain and numerous cloudy days.
- US weekly export inspections for the week ending June 20 were 44.0 million bu of corn, 12.6 million bu of soybeans and 12.6 million bu of wheat. For their respective crop years, the US has shipped out 1,639 million bu of corn (up 360 million or 28%), 38.6 million bu of wheat (up 11 million or 39%), and 1,514 million bu of soybeans (down 292 million or 16%).
- Chicago futures have fully retraced the summer rally as spot Chicago wheat futures drop to $5.465. Yet EU and Russian fob wheat values are far higher with Russian wheat offered at $230/mt and Eastern European wheat at $229/mt. Midwest SRW wheat yields are coming in 2-5 bushels/acre below last year, something of a surprise.
- The midday GFS weather forecast shows little run to run consistency, except for a high pressure ridge across the South-Central US. The ridge is strong and at times noses northward into Illinois/Indiana. Ridge riding storms will pull across the Upper Midwest and add to the flooding woes of IA/MN and WI. NW Midwest crops need sunshine and weeks of dry weather to root down, since crop nutrients have been leached out. The high pressure ridge also dries out/heats up the Delta, Plains and the Southern Midwest. This is a warm to hot weather pattern starting in early July. The mean position of the high pressure ridge heads to the SE US on July 7. We would suspect that the mean ridge position is too far east. The eastern disposed ridge would push copious amounts of rain for the W Midwest, and exacerbate current flooding woes.
- The big crop yield risk via weather is the ongoing flooding and excessive rain across the NW Midwest/N Plains. Corn can only tolerate standing water for 2-4 days before it has a significant impact on yield in the pretassel/silking stage. And temperatures above 86 degrees add to corn’s stress in saturated fields. The market is understating potential yield loss to excessive rain and budding corn disease pressures. Russian wheat is bid at $230/mt or some $30/mt more than when spot Chicago wheat traded below $5.50. US corn and soybean crop conditions are expected to decline sharply this afternoon.