After the Bell | August 15, 2022

Soybeans down sharply on favorable Midwest weather outlook, China concerns; corn, wheat also lower.

Pro Farmer's After the Bell
Pro Farmer’s After the Bell
(Farm Journal)

Corn: December corn fell 14 cents to $6.28 1/4. Corn fell for the first session in the past five on an outlook for favorable weather in the Midwest and easing supply concerns as grain shipments continued to move out of Ukraine’s Black Sea ports. USDA reported the U.S. corn crop condition at 57% “good” or “excellent” as of Sunday, down from 58% a week earlier and one percentage point higher than expected.

Soybeans: November soybeans fell 42 cents to $14.12 1/4, the contract’s lowest closing price since Aug. 8 but up over 26 cents off the session low. September soymeal fell $12.50 to $452.20. September soyoil fell 59 points to 68.94 cents. Soybeans on an outlook for favorable crop conditions in the Midwest and concern over weaker economic data from China. USDA reported 58% of the soybean crop in good-to-excellent condition, down from 59% a week ago and in-line with trade expectations.

Wheat: September SRW wheat fell 5 1/4 cents to $8.00 3/4. September HRW wheat fell 6 1/2 cents to $8.82 3/4. September spring wheat fell 8 3/4 cents to $9.10 3/4. Weakness in corn and soybean futures spilled over into the wheat, with additional bearish influences from outside markets, as crude oil prices tumbled and the U.S. dollar strengthening. USDA reported 64% of the spring wheat crop in good-to-excellent condition, unchanged from a week earlier and one percentage point above expectations.

Cotton: December cotton rose the expanded daily limit of 500 points to 113.59 cents, the contract’s highest close since June 21. Cotton extended Friday’s rally, which was sparked by USDA slashing its U.S. production estimate to 12.57 million bales from 15.5 million bales.

Cattle: October live cattle fell 70 cents to $143.80, the lowest closing price since Aug. 9, while September feeder cattle fell 37.5 cents to $183.00. Live cattle futures fell a second straight session in a corrective pullback from last week’s gains. Declines were limited by expectations cash cattle prices will be firmer again this week, though the market may not establish until the middle of the week. Choice cutout values rose $1.09 to $264.46 on movement of 95 loads.

Hogs: October lean hogs rose 55 cents to $100.575, near the session high. Futures were supported by firm cash fundamentals. The CME lean hog index rose 7 cents to $121.93 (as of Aug. 11), near a 14-month high posted last week. Tomorrow’s index is expected to drop 22 cents. Pork cutout values surged $3.08 to $124.91, led by a gain of over $13 in bellies. Movement totaled 295 loads.