US weekly soybean futures end higher on US-China trade hopes


CHICAGO - Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) agricultural futures closed mixed in the trading week ending Jan 25, with soybeans rising nearly 1 percent as traders hope that the planned US-China trade talks next week would bring good outcome.
The most active contract for March soybeans was up 8.5 cents weekly, or 0.93 percent, to $9.2525 per bushel. March wheat added 2.25 cents, or 0.43 percent, to $5.2 per bushel. March corn went down 1.5 cents, or 0.39 percent, to $3.8025 per bushel.
China has been the world's top soybean buyer. Any positive development concerning the trade talks between the two sides will boost US soybean prices.
Due to the prolonged federal government shutdown, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has not updated its exports sales, supply and demand reports since Dec 22, 2018.
Traders had to learn from other channels for statistics, with eyes on any new development concerning the ongoing US-China trade talks.
CBOT wheat futures firmed on hopes that rising prices in Russia, the world's biggest exporter, would bolster US exports.
Russian on-farm stocks as of Dec 31 were below expectations, suggesting the USDA's domestic disappearance estimate is too low. Black Sea cash wheat prices also soared to new seasonal highs.
Australia will export very little wheat over the next 12-13 months. And this week's flood of tender activity indicates major importers have been mostly hand-to-mouth in terms of extending supply coverage.
CBOT corn futures ended lower on modest fund liquidation. Funds since the government shutdown have alternated between net buying and selling, leaving their position near unchanged from mid-December.
Fundamentally, weak biofuel margins continue to battle elevated export demand. And until US government data is available, the choppy trend will persist.
- Chinese investment embraced across US Midwest as trade battle intensifies
- Chicago agricultural futures lower in morning trade
- Pig farmers feel pinch from Trump's tariffs: US National Pork Board COO
- CBOT soybeans up over short-covering amid escalating trade tensions
- CBOT soybean and corn futures hit new lows amid renewed China-US trade frictions