Corn Commodity Markets, Prices & Futures
Use the chart below to check futures prices for corn. Click the contract dates for more prices and trends. Cash price reflects the USDA Chicago terminal.
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Latest News From Corn Markets
Soybeans lower with profit taking in meal and better SA weather. That’s weighing on corn, plus lower crude oil and SRW wheat. Livestock extend gains but for how long? Kent Beadle, Paradigm Futures, has more.
Grains lower, livestock higher. But when will row crops break out of their sideways ranges? Can beans rally if corn doesn’t? When should livestock producers buy feed? We ask Jon Scheve, Superior Feed Ingredients.
Corn and soybean prices seem stuck. So, what catalyst could it take to move commodity prices higher? There are a few, but analysts say the reality is there’s simply no story at the moment.
This week’s price action in soybeans and soybean meal has many wondering if a South American weather market is starting early. Even China is taking notice.
AgDay TV Markets Now: Shawn Hackett, Hackett Financial Advisors, says soybeans rally with meal and talk of China sales and corn tries to follow. However, both markets have had difficulty sustaining rallies. Why?
Soybean futures ended the week on good note, with an extended soymeal rally amid strong U.S. demand breathing life into the complex.
Soybeans up w/meal and talk of China biz and corn tried to follow. Wheat saw profit taking with bearish Black Sea export news. Cattle higher with improved cash. Shawn Hackett, Hackett Financial Advisors, has more.
Cattle strong on higher cash, shake off lower equities. Hogs see more short covering. Corn & soybeans see corrective buying w/talk of China soybean biz, higher meal. Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek, joins us.
Researchers from UNL, Iowa State University and the China Agricultural University have done what seemed impossible a decade ago: they finished sequencing the entire corn genome, a major breakthrough for yield.
Farmers applying NH3 can maximize their dollars and use of the product by not applying it until soil temperatures are no more than 50 degrees and trending lower, according to Iowa State University Extension.