Commodity Markets, Prices & Futures

Use the chart below to check futures prices for commodities. Click the links for pricing on grains, livestock, oil and more and stay on top of what’s going on in the markets. Cash price reflects the USDA Chicago terminal.

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Latest News from Markets
The grain markets had several drivers this week, including daily reports from the Pro Farmer Crop Tour, more big purchases from China and continued uncertainty of the crop damage in Iowa.
Soybeans plunge on rains; wheat mostly higher on Black Sea war news, corn 2-sided in the middle. Corn & bean export biz fails to support. Feeders make some new highs, Feds mixed. Kevin Duling, KD Investors has more.
The U.S. rejected Mexico’s proposal to jointly research the health effects of genetically modified (GM) corn, according to Reuters and Mexico media.
The losses the past seven to 10 days have cost farmers dearly, says Jerry Gulke. When fundamentals don’t influence prices the way we’ve come to expect, he says it’s time to look behind the scenes.
AgDay TV Markets Now: Mark Schultz , Northstar Commodity, talks about the lower week in grains, the chart damage it left and where prices go next week heading into the WASDE.
Row crops bounce Friday but all the grains are lower for the week and so are hogs. Cattle close strong Friday and for the week on the heels of better Northern Cash. Mark Schultz, Northstar Commodity explains.
Soybeans were able to secure follow-through gains to end the week, along with an advanced technical posture, with a close held above the 40- and 200-day moving averages.
Grains up on profit taking, geopolitical concerns but still following weather. Cattle supported by a higher cash tone, milk futures are up but is $20 milk in the cards? Bryan Doherty, Total Farm Marketing has
Grains up on renewed geopolitical concerns, corrective buying, still eyeing weather. Cattle are higher with steady to higher cash in the North. Hogs rolling over. Chip Nellinger, Blue Reef Agri-Marketing has more
In a move to combat the use of food as a weapon, the U.S. is stepping forward to lead an international initiative supported by over 75 countries.
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