Soybeans finished trading leading downward momentum on the CBOT, momentum that only corn futures managed to avoid in Wednesday's session. Part of the reason why is that after Tuesday's Wasde report, ...
By Karen Braun CHICAGO (Reuters) -China giveth, China taketh away. Agricultural exporters around the world know this feeling ...
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions ...
CBOT grains fell after Tuesday's Wasde report left much of the agency's domestic outlook unchanged from the previous month--even if world projections showed a tighter story for both corn and soybeans.
While it's become a common theme for US grain markets that funds are purchasing corn, there are indications that this trend ...
Funds bought corn” is perhaps becoming a broken record for U.S. grain markets, though there are signs that the streak could ...
Funds bought corn” is perhaps becoming a broken record for U.S. grain markets, though there are signs that the streak could ...
Jerry Gulke, president of the Gulke Group, says grains took a pause Friday in preparation for the February WASDE but is in ...
Alan Brugler, A&N Economics, says grains pulled back Friday on profit taking after hitting chart resistance and with ...
Fears of winter kill of the germinating wheat plants in the highly fertile Black Sea region of Europe and colder temps in the ...
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report provided a friendly surprise for corn ...
--Wheat for March delivery rose 2.8% to $5.87 3/4 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade on Thursday, with grain traders seen as rebalancing their portfolios to add more long wheat positions.
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