AgDay TV Markets Now: Shawn Hackett Discusses What Will Confirm a Trend Change in Grain Prices

AgDay TV Markets Now: Shawn Hackett, Hackett Financial Advisors says grains end higher on Monday but he is looking for one specific signal that the markets have changed trend.

Grain markets ended higher Monday with short covering and corrective buying. Shawn Hackett, Hackett Financial Advisors, says it’s a dead cat bounce and nothing more than the market correcting its oversold status. He says he hasn’t seen a technical confirmation of a trend change.

So, what is he looking for on the charts? “Basis the July contracts I need to see a weekly close in corn above $4.50, for soybeans $12.00 and for Chicago wheat above $6.00. Until then I am suspect that the rally can hold.” Plus, he believes farmers and fund traders will sell on strength making rallies difficult to sustain.

News reports of China buying corn, sorghum and barley were also psychologically supportive, but Hackett says they are buying corn from Ukraine and he doesn’t see them buying from the U.S. Plus, he says China’s prices are not indicating they need to buy for reserves. “Until I see corn, soybeans and especially meal prices rising in China I don’t think we have evidence of further buying,” he says.

China is also buying Brazil soybeans with their harvest progressing. Hackett thinks USDA and Conab will confirm a smaller Brazil soybean and corn crop in their reports this week, but the cuts may not be big enough to spur China to buy from the U.S.

Hackett says, however, other end users are finding value in U.S. corn and soybean prices. The evidence is improved export inspections on Monday and 4.3 million bushels of export business to Taiwan and another flash sale of 126,000 metric tons of meal to unknown destinations split between old and new crop.

Wheat may be the exception as Russia and Ukraine prices have continued to pull Paris milling wheat lower. Before reversing on Monday May Chicago wheat hit new contract lows again. Hackett says until European wheat prices find a solid bottom it will just serve as an anchor on U.S. wheat prices and in turn row crops.

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Wednesday morning USDA reported a flash sale of 13.2 million bushels of soybeans to unknown destinations and Randy Martinson with Martinson Ag says the market is betting that its China.
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Vince Boddicker of Farmers Trading Company says while no sales have been confirmed, just the rumors of China in the U.S. market looking for bids brought buyers back into the market.
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