Grain Bulls Wobble as Crude Oil Prices Slump. What to Watch Next.

Nymex West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil (CLM26) prices on April 30 hit a high of $110.93 a barrel amid the closure of the Strait of Hurmuz that is choking off the global supply of oil. Crude oil is viewed as the leader of the raw commodity sector and its rising tide lifted many other…


Grain Bulls Wobble as Crude Oil Prices Slump. What to Watch Next.

Nymex West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil (CLM26) prices on April 30 hit a high of $110.93 a barrel amid the closure of the Strait of Hurmuz that is choking off the global supply of oil. Crude oil is viewed as the leader of the raw commodity sector and its rising tide lifted many other raw commodity boats, including the grains. While crude oil was rallying, corn (ZCN26) futures hit a 12-month high and winter wheat (ZWN26) futures hit two-year highs. Soybean (ZSN26) futures were the laggard but did manage to hit a nearly two-month high.

However, reports last week of a potential U.S.-Iran war peace plan, along with a ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran that is mostly holding up, sunk the crude oil market, with WTI last week dropping to an intra-day low of $88.66 a barrel. The grain futures markets also sold off last week.

More News from Barchart

July soft red winter (SRW) wheat futures on Friday rose 6 3/4 cents to $6.19 but for the week were down 18 3/4 cents. July hard red winter (HRW) wheat (KEN26) Friday futures gained 8 1/2 cents to $6.75 3/4 and for the week lost 18 3/4 cents. July corn on Friday rose 3 3/4 cents to $4.71 1/4 but for the week was down 9 cents. July soybean futures rose 15 3/4 cents on Friday, to $12.08, and for the week were up 4 3/4 cents.

Itโ€™s my bias that the grain marketsโ€™ susceptibility to the price pressure from falling crude oil prices will quickly dissipate. It can be argued that lower crude oil prices are actually bullish for the grain markets, from a global demand perspective. The sharply higher energy prices around the world are squeezing global economies and are reducing their gross domestic product. That likely means less demand for grain imports in those nations. Lower oil prices would translate into better global economic growth and in turn better global demand for goods and services, including the grains.

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Letโ€™s Break Down Each Grain Futures Market

Corn futures on Friday saw short covering and perceived bargain hunting, following three sessions in a row of losses. Traders will keep watching the weekly USDA crop progress reports on Monday afternoons. Tuesdayโ€™s monthly USDA supply and demand report will be a highlight of the grain-trading week. Corn traders are expecting the agency to significantly reduce this yearโ€™s U.S. corn production level, from that seen last year. Traders are also expecting a slight rise in U.S. and global corn stocks, compared to the April USDA S&D report.

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