|
DTN Midday Grain Comments 06/30 10:47
Soybean Futures are Higher at Midday; Corn Narrowly Mixed; Wheat Flat to
Higher
Corn futures are narrowly mixed at midday Monday; soybean futures are 9 to
12 cents higher; wheat futures are flat to 3 cents higher.
David M. Fiala
DTN Contributing Analyst
MARKET SUMMARY:
Corn futures are narrowly mixed at midday Monday; soybean futures are 9 to
12 cents higher; wheat futures are flat to 3 cents higher. The U.S. stock
market is firmer with the S&P 11 points higher. The U.S. Dollar Index is 40
points lower. The interest rate products are firmer. Energy trade is weaker
with crude .50 lower and natural gas .28 lower. Livestock trade is mostly
lower. Precious metals are mixed with gold up 12.00.
CORN:
Corn futures are narrowly mixed as we head to the stocks and acreage reports
release at 11 a.m. CDT. Action is still stuck at the lower end of the range. On
the report, trade is looking for corn stocks at 4.641 billion bushels (bb)
versus 4.997 bb last year; acres at 95.530 million versus 90.60 million last
year and 95.33 million in March. Ethanol margins have shown little change in
recent days. Short-term weather may trend warmer but moisture continues to look
mostly adequate with the weekly report likely to show steady to slightly better
conditions and average development. Weekly export inspections remained solid at
1.370 million metric tons (mmt) with year-to-date pace running at 129%. Basis
looks to remain rangebound as the July contract goes into delivery. On the
September chart, the 20-day moving average at $4.21 is resistance with the
fresh low at $4.02 1/4 as support.
SOYBEANS:
Soybean futures are 9 to 12 cents higher at midday with decent buying in
pre-report action while meal works to ease the deeply oversold conditions
pre-report. Meal is 1.00 to 2.00 higher and oil is 30 to 40 points higher. On
the report, trade is looking for stocks at 980 mb versus 970 mb last year;
acres at 83.655 million versus 83.495 million in March and 87.05 million last
year. Weather should generally remain good for development short term with
steady conditions and average development pace expected on the weekly report.
Basis should remain steady to softer near term with crusher margins still
struggling. The daily export wire saw 204,000 metric tons (mt) of new-crop meal
sold to unknown destinations. Weekly export inspections were soft at 224,787
mt, although year-to-date pace remains at 110%. On the September chart, support
is the fresh low at $10.05 3/4 with resistance the 20-day moving average at
$10.29, which we are just below at midday.
WHEAT:
Wheat futures are flat to 3 cents higher at midday with choppy action
continuing as harvest progresses on the Plains and the dollar remains at the
lower end of the range. On the report, trade is looking for 836 mb of stocks
versus 696 mb last year; acres at 45.438 million versus 45.350 million in March
and 46.079 million last year. The hard red wheat areas should start to catch up
somewhat this week with the weekly report expected to show harvest still well
behind average pace with steady conditions; spring wheat conditions should
improve a bit with development in line with the 5-year average. MATIF wheat is
weaker Monday morning. Weekly export inspections improved a bit to 434,539 mt
with year-to-date pace at 92%. On the KC September chart, resistance is the
20-day moving average at $5.53, with the lower Bollinger Band at $5.25 as
support.
David Fiala can be reached at dfiala@futuresone.com
Follow him on social platform X @davidfiala
(c) Copyright 2025 DTN, LLC. All rights reserved.
No other Daily email offers as much useful Ag information as DTN Snapshot – Sign up Free today!
|
|