Friday’s trade was less about grain market fundamentals than it was “risk off” trade from a meltdown in financial and energy markets. The U.S. dollar rose 160 bps for the day, which pressured grain futures from an export competitiveness standpoint and corn, wheat, and soybeans all posted 1.7-3 percent losses. Neither corn nor wheat nor soybeans broke their major technical support or resistance planes, however, which suggests next week’s trade will likely see a return to trading based on grain market fundamentals. The weekly CFTC report showed funds expanding their long positions in soyoil, soymeal, and corn while covering another 4,500 contracts in their short SRW wheat position. Funds were net sellers of soyb...
Communicating importance of value-added products
Facing increasing pressure to quantify the value of export promotion efforts to investors, a U.S. industry organization retained WPI to develop a quantitative model that better communicated the importance of exports. The resulting model concluded that value-added meat exports contributed $0.45 cents per bushel to the price of corn, increasing support for that sector’s financial support of WPI’s client. In addition to serving the red meat industry with this type of analysis, WPI has generated similar deliverables for the U.S. soybean and poultry/egg industries.
What You Need to Know Today: Commodities were mostly lower across the board today after yesterday’s Federal Reserve meeting hinted at a potential interest rate hike later in 2026. The dollar index reached its highest level in over a year, and a strong dollar makes U.S. agricultural expor...
Tomorrow is the Juneteenth federal holiday, and the USDA, along with the rest of the federal government and the CME, will be closed, so the monthly Cattle on Feed report was released a day early. The total number of cattle on feed in feedlots with 1,000 head or more capacity on 1 June amounted...