CHICAGO: Following are U.S. expectations for the resumption of grain and soy complex trading at the Chicago Board ...
U.S. grains led by corn fell Wednesday on the CBOT, as traders coped with both Tuesday's WASDE report and new retaliatory ...
After the USDA Ag Outlook Forum released corn planting intentions at 94 million acres and ending stocks over 1.9 billion ...
The EU package, which could see the bloc reintroduce a 25% duty on US corn and potentially add a tariff on US soybeans, added ...
In eight trading sessions, the corn market has lost nearly 50 cents per bushel. Jon Scheve discusses how likely corn will ...
Farmers will have trouble eking out a profit this year, experts say, but they see corn as the better route to earnings than ...
The USDA increased its ending stocks projection for U.S. wheat. Domestic 2024/25 wheat ending stocks are now pegged at 819 ...
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report provided a friendly surprise for corn ...
The CBOT's most-active wheat closed down 5-3/4 cents at $5.56-3/4 a bushel. Corn ended down 1-3/4 cents at $4.70-1/4 a bushel, while soybeans settled down 2-3/4 cents at $10.11-1/4 per bushel.
Soybean futures were flat to narrowly mixed while wheat futures drifted lower but stayed inside of Thursday's trading range. A drop in the dollar lent support, making U.S. grains cheaper overseas.
U.S. corn futures fell to their lowest levels of 2025 on Tuesday and soybean futures dropped below $10 a bushel on heightened ...