After the Bell | November 15, 2022

Grain, soybean futures end firmer as reports of Russia missile strikes in Poland stoke supply concerns.

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

Corn: December corn gained 1/2 cents to $6.66 3/4, after dropping earlier to a 2 1/2-month low at $6.51 1/4. Corn erased overnight declines and rallied following reports Russian missiles crossed into Poland, killing two people. The strikes stirred concern a potential extension of a Ukraine grain export deal was in jeopardy as the agreement’s Nov. 19 expiration nears.

Soybeans: January soybeans rose 16 3/4 cents to $14.57 1/4, the contract’s highest close since Nov. 4. December soymeal rose $3.90 to $409.90. December soyoil rose 70 cents to 76.98 cents. Soybeans climbed on demand optimism. The National Oilseed Processors Association (NOPA) reported crushing totaled 184.464 million bu. during October, up 17% from September and up 0.3% from October 2021.

Wheat: December SRW wheat rose 9 3/4 cents to $8.28 1/4, the contract’s highest close since Nov. 7. December HRW wheat rose 6 3/4 cents to $9.63, the highest since Nov. 1. December spring wheat rose 11 cents to $9.74. Wheat recovered from earlier declines after reports of Russian missiles striking Poland stoked renewed concern over disruption to global grain supplies.

Cotton: December cotton rose 346 points to 88.74 cents, a five-week high close. Cotton futures surged behind weakness in the U.S. dollar and signs of improved demand from China.

Cattle: December live cattle fell 30 cents to $151.275, the contract’s lowest close since Oct. 18. January feeder cattle fell $2.425 to $177.025, a four-week low today. Nearby cattle ended at a four-week low as traders waiting for confirmation whether recent cash market strength will continue this week. Choice beef cutout values rose 38 cents to $258.36 on strong movement of 157 loads.

Hogs: December lean hogs rose 45 cents to $85.3250, the contract’s highest close since Nov. 8. Hogs rebounded from recent sessions’ weakness but cash fundamentals remained soft. Wednesday’s preliminary CME lean hog index is expected to fall 16 cents to $88.49, the lowest since Feb. 9. Pork cutout values fell 86 cents to $95.70, led by declines in loins. Movement was stronger at 353.6 loads.