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 risk off day in the outside macro market has funds selling across the commodity complex. Kevin Duling of KD Investors says May corn needs to hold support at $6.50 and wheat prices are below pre-war levels.
Fund liquidation continues in the grains. Cattle make new highs on higher cash, cutouts, lower corn, COF positioning. Hogs follow higher cutouts, strong weekly exports. Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek has more
AgDay TV Markets Now: Mike Zuzulo of Global Commodity Analytics Discusses What Led to the Selloff in Corn and New Highs in Cattle
A large portion of the safrinha corn crop in Brazil’s Parana and Mato Grosso do Sul states will be planted outside the ideal window, according to AgRural.
The United States natural gas market has imploded with prices dropping 80% since summer. So, should end users be locking in supplies?
Grains were mostly lower after USDA’s forecasts. Cattle marked new highs again ahead of the Cattle on Feed report, and hogs followed with strong cutouts. Mike Zuzulo of Global Commodity Analytics has the details.
Grains mostly lower with consolidation, a lack of fresh bullish news, USDA’s Ag Outlook numbers. Live cattle hit contract highs on the atypical BSE case. Jeff Hoogendoorn of Professional Ag Marketing has more.
Grains start steady to higher but turn two-sided looking for direction. Cattle making new highs with the atypical BSE case in Brazil. Hogs consolidating. Chuck Shelby of Risk Management Commodities has more.
AgDay TV Markets Now: DuWayne Bosse of Bolt Marketing talks about the selloff in grains including risk off, profit taking in soybeans and corn, plus moisture in HRW areas weighed on wheat.
The Federal Reserve needs to get inflation on to a sustainable path down toward its 2% goal this year or else risk a repeat of the 1970s. . .