DTN Midday Grain Comments 06/30 10:52
30 Jun 2022
DTN Midday Grain Comments 06/30 10:52 Grains Lower at Midday Corn trade is 13 to 15 cents lower, beans are 13 to 21 cents lower and wheat is 3 to 12 cents lower. David M. Fiala DTN Contributing Analyst MARKET SUMMARY: The U.S. stock market is weaker with the Dow down 300 points. The dollar index is 15 points lower. Interest rate products are higher. Energies are weaker with crude down 3.05. Livestock trade is mixed. Precious metals are weaker with gold down $11. CORN: Corn trade is 13 to 15 cents lower at midday with improved forecasts and position squaring ahead of the 11 a.m. CDT Stocks and Acreage reports. Trade will continue to watch the forecast with more focus on corn pollination temperatures as we push into July with the back of the forecast looking warmer with better short-term rains expected for many. On the report, trade is looking for 4.343 billion bushels (bb) in stocks vs. 4.111 billion last year, and a range of 4.035 bb to 4.474 bb with acres at 89.86 million on a range of 88.4 ma to 91.0 ma and the March number at 89.48 million. Weekly export sales were poor at 88,800 metric tons old crop and 119,300 of new crop. The export wire will need to show value buyers picking up bushels on the break with nothing on the daily report yet. The ethanol margins are likely to remain rangebound with strong blender margins remaining in place with unleaded continuing to fade. Basis remains solid through most of the Corn Belt, with most place moving their bids to the September contract. On the September chart, support is the fresh low at $6.54 with lower Bollinger Band just below that at $6.47 1/2, with the 20-day well above the market at $7.08. SOYBEANS: Soybean trade is 13 to 21 cents lower at midday with selling ahead of the report after the four-day rebound from week-ago lows with trade waiting to see if acres change today. Mea1 is flat to $1 lower, and oil is 115 to 125 points lower. On the report, trade is looking for stocks at 965 million bushels (mb), on a range of 740 mb to 1.1 bb, with acres at 90.44 million on a range of 88.7 ma to 92.35 ma and March at 90.955 ma. Weekly export sales were soft at -120,200 metric tons of old crop, 127,600 metric tons of new crop, 23,900 metric tons of old crop meal, and 47,900 of new crop with oil at 1,200. Biodiesel margins are very good at the moment, which should bolster crush recovery into fall with fresh capacity expected to come online then. South America is moving towards post-harvest footing at this point with planting wrapped up for full season in the U.S. and getting started on double crop with wheat harvest moving quickly with moisture needed to boost development. Basis is fading a bit at processors and exporters in recent days with the daily wire remaining quiet. On the August soybean chart, support is the lower Bollinger Band at $15.06 with the 20-day well above the market at $16.05. WHEAT: Wheat trade was 3 to 12 cents lower at midday with trade failing to hold overnight gains again as harvest pressure fades for winter wheat and spring wheat sees a less threatening short-term forecast becoming an anchor on the complex. The push higher from the greater-than-expected Egypt buying faded with spillover pressure from row crops. Plains weather should allow for harvest to continue moving with few areas slowed by rains. The dollar continues to hold in the upper end of the range with the strong ruble helping competitiveness, as well, with Russia expected to have near-record supplies with other Black Sea supply diminishing short term. On the report, stocks are expected to be at 655 million bushels on a range of 635 mb to 675 mb. Weekly export sales were solid at 496,700 metric tons. The KC September chart has support at the fresh low at $9.77 scored Monday with the lower Bollinger Band at $9.45 and the 20-day still well above the market at $10.94. David Fiala can be reached at
[email protected] Follow him on Twitter @davidfiala (c) Copyright 2022 DTN, LLC. All rights reserved.