DTN Midday Grain Comments 04/30 10:48
Corn, Beans, Wheat All Lower at Midday Tuesday
Corn trade is 3 to 4 cents lower. Beans are 19 to 20 cents lower and wheat
trade is 4 to 14 cents lower.
David M. Fiala
DTN Contributing Analyst
MARKET SUMMARY:
The U.S. stock market is firmer at midday with the S&P 30 points lower. The
dollar index is up 50 points. The interest rate products are weaker. Energies
are weaker with crude off $0.85 and natural gas off a penny. Livestock trade is
weaker. Precious metals are weaker with gold down $49.
CORN:
Corn is 3 to 4 cents lower at midday with the May contract going into
delivery with continued rains in the forecast for much of the Corn Belt.
Ethanol margins should remain range-bound in short term as spring driving
should expand further into May with unleaded weakness leaning on blender
margins a bit again. Near-term weather looks to keep rain chances in play for
much of the belt with planting and emergence running ahead of average at 27%
planted vs. 22% and emerged at 7% vs. 4% on average on the report yesterday
afternoon.
The daily wire was quiet today. The recent patterns in South America
continue with some areas of concern for double-crop corn lingering. On the July
chart, the 20-day at $4.46 is nearby support which we are testing at midday
with the recent high at $4.60 the next level of resistance.
SOYBEANS:
Soybeans are 19 to 20 cents lower at midday with trade again fading from
nearby resistance levels as oil scores fresh lows and meal fades after early
strength. Meal is $0.50 to $1.50 lower and oil is 135 to 145 points lower.
South American bushels should continue to attract the most export attention as
harvest continues to wrap in Brazil with Argentina coming soon.
The daily wire was quiet today. Planting progress is likely slow with the
rain, but the warmer weather should help emergence on the planted acres with
the weekly report showing planting at 18% vs. 10% on average. July soybean
futures have support at the $11.40 recent low. Chart resistance is at the
20-day moving average at $11.79 which we are fading from again.
WHEAT:
Wheat trade is 4 to 14 cents lower at midday with trade fading further from
the fresh highs as we ease overbought conditions along with near-term weather
concerns in the Black Sea and parts of the plains calming for now. The Plains
will see seasonal to above-normal temps to push the crop along with better
overall rain chances expected into early May with the western Plains expected
to struggle the most. Black Sea concerns should ease short term with the
extended forecast being watched to see if the warmer and drier pattern returns.
The dollar continues to work a bit short of the highs with MATIF wheat
continuing to ease as well. Weekly crop progress showed winter wheat at 30%
headed vs. 23% on average with good to excellent at 49%, down 1% with poor to
very poor unchanged at 16%. Spring wheat was 34% planted vs. 19% on average and
5% emerged, the same as average. On the KC July chart, support is the 20-day at
$5.98, with the fresh high at 6.64 as further resistance.
David Fiala can be reached at dfiala@futuresone.com
Follow him on social platform X @davidfiala
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