CBOT weekly outlook: Soy in ‘little bit of a free fall’

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 20, 2019

, , ,

CBOT May 2019 soybeans with 20- and 100-day moving averages. (Barchart)

Soybeans, wheat and corn have been trading generally lower of late on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT).

In particular soybeans are in “a little bit of a free fall,” said Terry Reilly, senior agriculture futures analyst with Futures International in Chicago.

“It’s purely technical. We closed below the 100-day moving average (Tuesday) based on the May contract. We saw additional selling coming to the market today without any fresh bullish news.”

The same traders have been looking at the May soybean contract in the area of $9 per bushel, he said (all figures US$). May soybeans dropped to $9.07 per bushel Wednesday morning, but managed to settle well above that at $9.16.

Read Also

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney shakes hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Friday, Jan. 16, 2026.

Canada, China slash EV, canola tariffs in reset of ties

Canada and China have struck an initial trade deal that will slash tariffs on electric vehicles and canola, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Friday, as both nations promised to tear down trade barriers while forging new strategic ties.

Wheat was feeling the pressure as well, according to Reilly, and pointed to the Paris wheat market as one reason, as it’s been hitting lows since July 2018.

“Also, U.S. wheat wasn’t part of the Egyptian import tender for offers this morning. So traders are seeing that as U.S. not competitive against major exporting countries.”

Corn has been following soybeans and wheat on the downward trend, without a fundamental reason as to why, Reilly noted.

He pointed out that U.S. President Donald Trump wants corn to be included in any upcoming trade deal with China.

“Corn is seen as underpinned, seeing limited losses because of that remark,” Reilly said.

Trade talks between the two economic superpowers continued in Washington, D.C. this week, picking up from where they left off the previous week in Beijing. Talks began with lower-level discussions and are to move to high-level negotiations Thursday.

So far, little news has come out of the talks, but Reilly said it has been positive. With several tough issues to deal with, including agriculture, intellectual property and corporate regulation, a final deal may not be reached any time soon, he added.

“It may take just a little bit longer than what people are looking for to get the deal done.”

— Glen Hallick writes for MarketsFarm, a Glacier FarmMedia division specializing in grain and commodity market analysis and reporting.

explore

Stories from our other publications