For many months, the CME grain and soy markets have been stuck in a fundamentally, technically and emotionally bearish pattern. Typically, trading volumes and volatility levels decline during bearish market cycles, which has certainly been the case this time around. Underlying all of the bearishness is the fundamental fact that four years of huge worldwide grain and oilseed production have built up global supplies faster than demand has been able to consume them. World stocks have grown to record levels, reflected by consistently low cash prices for grain and oilseeds. The old rule that low prices are the best cure for low prices has not been repealed, but increasing production efficiencies worldwide, beneficial crop weather, and fluctuatio...