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
Grains see corrective buying end of month, hit resistance, plus risk off in outside markets. Profit taking in LC after new contract highs, while hogs continue their recovery. Rich Nelson of Allendale has more.
AgDay TV Markets Now: Matt Bennett of AgMarket.Net talks about the SA weather rally in soybeans and meal and if those markets can move higher? Plus, live cattle hit contract highs on higher cash.
Expected large Brazilian corn exports to China in 2023 are worrying Brazil’s meat companies, according to a statement from Santa Catarina’s meat processors lobby Sindicarne.
Grains mostly higher with new contract highs in soybean meal putting in SA weather premium, but how high can prices go? Live cattle hit new contract highs on higher cash. Matt Bennett of AgMarket.Net has details.
Grains higher except corn, with weather concerns in South America. How much higher can soybeans go? Live cattle make new contract highs with help from higher cash. Ted Seifried of Zaner Ag Hedge has analysis.
Attorneys general (AGs) representing seven Midwest states are against asking EPA to issue a waiver that would allow E15 to be sold in the region, starting this summer.
The Biden administration should pursue enforcement action against Canada and Mexico where necessary, Senate Finance leaders Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) said in a letter...
“It’s been a quiet week except for wheat,” says Jerry Gulke, president of Gulke Group. “Wheat has some promise, but we’ll have to see what happens in Ukraine and also with the weather.”
AgDay TV Markets Now: Randy Martinson of Martinson Ag talks about Friday’s market action and how all the grains posted higher weekly closes despite improved weather in Argentina and HRW areas.
USDA’s attaché in Australia expects the country’s wheat crop to be slightly bigger than currently forecast by the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) and USDA.