Soya dips, corn rises

15 Aug, 2014

US soyabean futures dipped on Wednesday on expectations that autumn harvests will exceed government forecasts due to favourable weather, while new-crop corn bounced from a contract low set the previous session. Forecasts for rain in some of the drier areas of the US Midwest raised expectations that the US Department of Agriculture will boost its soyabean production forecast in the coming months.
Traders shrugged off lower-than-expected USDA estimates for soya and corn output, issued in a monthly report on Tuesday, saying that mild, wet weather has benefited crops. Farmers have reported gorgeous-looking plants in their fields. "The trade seems worried the USDA has a lot further to go in regard to raising the US corn yield," said Kevin Van Trump, chief executive of Farm Direction, a consultancy based in Missouri.
Chicago Board of Trade November soyabeans lost 1.2 percent to $10.46-3/4 a bushel, after setting a contract low of $10.43 a bushel in the previous session. If crop weather remains favourable, November soyabeans will likely drop to $9.50 or lower by the middle of harvest, said Tomm Pfitzenmaier, an analyst with Summit Commodity Brokerage in Iowa.
December corn rose 0.2 percent to $3.69-3/4 a bushel in a rebound from a contract low of $3.58 in the previous session. The USDA on Tuesday pegged the US corn harvest at a record 14.032 billion bushels, below analysts' estimates of 14.253 billion, and 2014/15 ending stocks at 1.808 billion bushels, below expectations of 2.005 billion. "We believe that in the end, the corn carryout will end up over 2 billion bushels and that the supply of grains around the world will severely limit any rallies," Pfitzenmaier said.
Traders waited for results from private crop tours spreading across the Midwest this month for clues on the size of the autumn harvests. Next week, participants on the annual Pro Farmer Midwest Crop Tour will survey hundreds of corn and soya fields. CBOT wheat slumped for the fifth consecutive session due to large global supplies and spillover pressure from the corn market, traders said. December wheat shed 1 percent to $5.45-1/2 a bushel. Commodity funds sold an estimated 5,000 soyabean contracts and 3,000 each of corn and wheat.

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