Livestock Markets
Grains rallied into the long weekend on the back of risk premium around potential weather and trade headlines, both of which fell flat, sending prices right back to where we started last week’s trade.
This week’s grain market action was anything but quiet (unlike Acreage & Stocks). From shifting momentum in September corn to capital flow signals flashing across the soy complex, we break down the price structure, trends, and relative strength driving the week’s biggest moves. Using top-down analysis and money flow metrics, we identify where conviction is building — and where it’s breaking. Whether you’re trading spreads, managing risk, or just trying to stay ahead of the combine, this is the map you need.
Grain markets were sharply higher in Wednesday’s trade as we approach a long weekend and the risks that come with it.
Following a New World screwworm assessment by USDA staff in Mexico and ongoing conversations between Secretary Rollins and the Mexican Secretary of Agriculture, USDA will start reopening the ports for cattle, bison and equine.
Equity markets continue to rally while pressure continues to seep into the grain markets. Livestock markets are treading near some inflection points on the chart.
From CPI to a “trade deal”, headlines throughout the day did little to move markets in a meaningful way. Here’s what caught our eye in today’s trade.
Corn futures got hit hard last week, and last month. Prices have found their footing to start June, but the Bulls have their work cutout for them.
It was a mixed bag across assets in Wednesday’s trade with equities relatively quiet while some commodities saw more movement. Here’s what caught our eye in today’s trade.
Wednesday was a busy day for markets, ranging from metals and energies to grains and indices. Oliver Sloup got some added insight from Market Strategist Phil Streible and Head of Research Dan White.
Livestock markets rounded out last week’s trade with a higher close. Thanks to a strong fundamental backdrop, that has propelled futures higher yet again. How much more upside is left?