Rough Rice Commodity Markets, Prices & Futures

Use the chart below to check futures prices for rough rice. Click the contract dates for more prices and trends. Cash price reflects the USDA Chicago terminal.

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Latest News From Rough Rice
Grains end mixed with end of quarter profit taking and report positioning. Cattle see fund selling with risk off in the equities. Hogs also await the Hogs and Pigs Report. Don Roose, U.S. Commodities sums it up.
As carbon capture pipeline projects gain momentum, questions are emerging regarding how the associated tax credits will impact farmers and conservation efforts.
Grain and livestock futures are mostly lower on fund selling. The risk off in outside markets is spilling over due to a looming government shutdown. Brad Kooima of Kooima Kooima Varilek has details.
AgDay TV Markets Now: Alan Brugler, Brugler Marketing says soybeans close higher on profit taking, corn on Mexican export biz. So, are the markets making early harvest lows or just being cautious before USDA reports?
Soybeans & corn up on profit taking, report positioning and MX corn export biz, wheat mixed. Cattle consolidate, digesting the COF. Macro markets fear a govt. shutdown. Alan Brugler, Brugler Marketing, covers it all!
USDA forecasts all food prices will increase 5.8% this year, within a range of 5.4% to 6.2%.
Soybeans see harvest pressure & technical selling, taking out support. That weighs on corn despite a 64.5 mb Mexico buy. Wheat mixed. Cattle come off lows, while hogs bounce. Kent Beadle, Paradigm futures has more.
Grains mixed. Soybeans see harvest pressure, corn tries to hold gains with a 65.4 mb Mexico buy, wheat mixed on spreads. Cattle fade the COF w/profit taking, hogs bounce. Randy Martinson, Martinson Ag, has details.
Yields can take a 5-bu.-per-acre hit as a result of the sickle running so high on stems it cuts off branches and allows them to fall below the deck. Losses can be reduced to 1 bu. per acre with header adjustments.
The corn market is turning stronger, says Jerry Gulke, while wheat was the first to reset and proceed like everything is normal, even though that’s not the case. When it comes to soybeans, there’s bad news and good news.
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