Much of the world has been enjoying the May Day holiday, which probably limited overnight trading volumes. Overnight futures prices found soybeans and wheat trading a bit lower, while corn hung around unchanged. Trading during the day came under the influence of diverse weather conditions and forecasts, and it was thus more active in terms of volume and price action. Chicago and KC wheat futures turned higher shortly after the day session opened as less-than-favorable weather headed toward important wheat-producing regions. Besides the U.S. Plains drought, dry conditions were forecast to continue for Russian and other Black Sea wheat areas to be accompanied by increasing heat. Most of Australia is forecast to remain dry into mid-May, causin...