AgDay Markets Now: Chip Nellinger Explains What Triggered Friday’s Grain Rally and if it Can Continue?

Chip Nellinger, Blue Reef Agri-Marketing, says it was a true money flow or “Get Me Out” day Friday. While it caused a short covering rally in grains, he’s not sure it can be sustained.

Grains end sharply higher Friday; livestock, financial markets and many other commodities melt down.

Chip Nellinger, Blue Reef Agri-Marketing, says it was a true money flow or “Get Me Out” day. “I think what’s driving this is just some outside market volatility.

The speculators had been buying commodities like gold, cocoa and coffee as a hedge against inflation but took profits in those markets as well. He says, “We’ve seen big moves in softs like cocoa, the coffee market, the metals markets as we saw gold into new all-time highs this past week and big reversal Friday.” The stock market also saw a melt down with the dollar index sharply higher.

He chalks it up to uncertainty with the Middle East or Iran Israel conflict flaring up, the continued escalation of the Black Sea war and fresh inflation fears.

Funds and speculative traders headed for the door and took profits or covered part of their massive, short positions in grains to produce a rally.

Is this action a one day move or a trend that will continue? Nellinger says it may be too soon to tell.

He will be watching the outside markets to start next week to determine if there is a more serious problem in the financial and commodity sectors or the economy. Initial inflation concerns had caused the initial correction in the stock market to start April, but he thinks there could be more serious issues.

If the rally continues in the grain market and triggers more fund short covering Nellinger thinks it may only produce a 20 to 30-cent rally as it will be muted by farmer selling.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist with StoneX, says the additional cut in winter wheat acres was a surprise but there were others as well.
Mike Zuzolo, Global Commodity Analytics, says grains were pressured by a host of factors including weather and fund liquidation.
Brad Kooima of Kooima Kooima Varilek says cattle futures are down with a risk off day in the ag markets. End of quarter profit taking and talk of a packer bailout is also weighing on futures.
Read Next
Incredibly surviving the Civil War, world wars, depressions, epidemics, and every milestone for two centuries, the Taylor gathering may be the oldest reunion on the planet.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App