After the Bell | September 23, 2022

Corn, soybean futures plunge to two-week lows on surging dollar, escalating recession concerns; wheat also down sharply.

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

Corn: December corn fell 11 /12 cents to $6.76 3/4, down 1 cent for the week and the lowest close since $6.68 1/2 on Sept. 8. Corn futures tumbled as the U.S. dollar’s rally to 20-year highs and escalating recession concerns fueled a broad commodity market sell-off.

Soybeans: November soybeans sank 31 1/4 cents to $14.25 3/4, down 22 3/4 cents for the week and the contract’s lowest close since Sept. 9. December soymeal dropped $5.60 to $423.30 and December soyoil fell 278 points to 63.68 cents. The soy complex followed corn and wheat lower amid intensifying macroeconomic concerns.

Wheat: December SRW wheat fell 30 1/4 cents to $8.80 1/2 but still rose 20 3/4 cents for the week. December HRW wheat dropped 29 cents to $9.50 1/2, up 15 1/4 cents for the week. December spring wheat fell 28 1/2 cents to $9.49 1/4. Wheat futures plunged amid growing economic concern.

Cotton: December cotton fell the 400-point daily limit to 92.54 cents, down 675 points for the week. Cotton tumbled with other commodity markets as the U.S. dollar soared and crude oil plunged over $4 to the lowest levels in over eight months.

Cattle: December live cattle fell 80 cents to $148.55, down $2.425 for the week and the contract’s lowest close since Aug. 31. November feeder cattle rose 20 cents to $178.25. USDA’s Cattle on Feed Report today showed the Sept. 1 feedlot inventory up 0.4% over the year-earlier level, with placements up a stronger than expected 0.4% and marketings 6.4% above year-ago.

Hogs: December lean hogs fell $2.875 to $82.80, the lowest close since Sept. 12. Livestock futures tumbled with other commodity markets today as the Federal Reserve’s recent interest rate hike fueled increasing concern over a global recession that could curtail meat demand. The CME lean hog index rose 5 cents to $98.01 (as of Sept. 21), but Monday’s quote is expected to decline 42 cents. Pork cutout values fell $2.95 to $100.93, the lowest since mid-May.