AgDay Markets Now: Scott Varilek Discusses if Cattle and Grains are Seeing Profit Taking or a Trend Change

Cattle and grains end lower so was it end of month profit taking or a trend change? Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek says cattle will recover but grains need a new weather story.

Cattle end lower for a second day still digesting news that China was delisting beef from the JBS plant in Greeley, Colorado, due to traces of ractopamine.

However, Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek, says this caused algorithm selling pressure on Wednesday and there was follow through selling Thursday.

However, he says, “The markets were overbought and in need of a correction.” Plus, the pullback coincided with end of month and sparked some fund or speculative profit taking.

Coming off a week of record cash the bulls were confident in another week of higher money only to be upset by the break in the futures. Varilek says cash cattle trade has been light but a bit lower at $186 in the South, but there have also been some reports of $191 in the North on Thursday.

Varilek is optimistic the futures will recover with the big discount the board has to cash and that has been supportive.

Grains end lower on end of month profit taking, risk off outside markets, plus technical and fund selling.

The markets were also removing weather premium but is this topping action?

Varilek says the wheat market looks like it’s put in a top as its priced in the global weather and production concerns, at least for now.

Without the help of the wheat market, he thinks it will also be tough for corn and soybeans to rally.

With the planting progress at or ahead of normal and the Drought Monitor showing decreasing drought in the U.S. the trade mentality is “rain makes grain” until the next weather scare.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Grain markets crashed on Thursday with profit taking and fund liquidation tied to disappointment over the lack of agricultural purchase agreements during day one of the U.S. China summit.
The grain markets were sharply lower Thursday morning with soybeans seeing 30-cent losses on disappointment the China summit has not produced any agricultural purchase agreements.
Sam Hudson with Cornbelt Marketing says corn and soybeans were firmer on inflationary buying and optimism regarding the China summit. Cattle soared with higher cash.
Read Next
The U.S. House approved legislation to allow year-round sales of E15 gasoline nationwide, aiming to lower fuel prices while facing pushback over potential refinery costs and the impact on the national debt.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App