US wheat tumbled as much as 2 percent on Tuesday as investors took profits after the previous session's five-week high and extended weather outlooks showed the possibility of crop-friendly rains in the United States and Russia.
Soyabean futures also were lower at the Chicago Board of Trade, pressured by record South American harvests and disappointing manufacturing data out of top importer China.
Corn was narrowly higher, touching a roughly two-week peak, on ideas that analyst outlooks for reduced US spring plantings could result in tighter supplies later this year. Investors already were evening positions ahead of the US Department of Agriculture's prospective plantings report, which is due in a week and considered one of the most important crop reports of the year.
The USDA after the close of trading on Monday boosted condition ratings for the winter wheat crop in Texas and Oklahoma, and held ratings steady in top growing state Kansas.
"Wheat has run its course to the upside," said Jefferies Bache analyst Shawn McCambridge, adding that export demand for US wheat remained lackluster.
Most-active CBOT May wheat was down 10-1/2 cents at $5.23-1/2 per bushel, while soyabeans for May delivery had fallen 7 cents to $9.76-1/2 by 10:47 am CDT (1547 GMT).
CBOT May corn was up 2 cents at $3.92-1/4.
The US Plains wheat-growing region was expected to remain mostly dry for the next week, but the main North American weather model GFS did show a chance for normal amounts of precipitation in the 11-to-15-day outlook, the Commodity Weather Group said.
The Mississippi River Delta still was wet, putting seedings of corn far behind schedule in an area of the country that typically is the first to plant.
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