CBOT weekly outlook: Fund liquidation weighs on grains, oilseeds

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 1, 2022

,

CBOT July 2022 corn (candlesticks) with Bollinger bands (20,2) and 50- and 100-day moving averages (yellow and green lines). (Barchart)

MarketsFarm — Soybean, corn and wheat futures in the United States all found themselves under pressure as the calendar flipped from May to June, with both the fundamental and technical signals turning bearish for the grains and oilseeds.

“We’ve got a technical thing going on with corn and wheat,” said Rich Feltes of RJ O’Brien in Chicago, noting a move below major moving averages in the two crops was encouraging additional speculative selling that was spilling into soybeans as well.

The July corn contract at the Chicago Board of Trade dropped below its 50-day moving average on Tuesday, with continued selling on June 1 seeing it near the 100-day average.

Read Also

Photo: Getty Images Plus

Alberta crop conditions improve: report

Varied precipitation and warm temperatures were generally beneficial for crop development across Alberta during the week ended July 8, according to the latest provincial crop report released July 11.

Chicago and Kansas City wheat contracts also fell below those key 20- and 50-day moving averages during the week, while Minneapolis spring wheat lagged to the downside due to persistent seeding delays in the northern U.S. and eastern Canadian Prairies.

Managed funds had built up heavy long positions across all the major agricultural markets but were now in a liquidation phase booking profits, according to Feltes.

A lack of major weather problems for U.S. soybean and corn crops, increasing Russian grain exports and the likelihood of a global recession were all contributing to the fund selloff, which could keep grains and oilseeds under pressure going forward.

— Phil Franz-Warkentin reports for MarketsFarm from Winnipeg.

About the author

Phil Franz-Warkentin

Phil Franz-Warkentin

Editor - Daily News

Phil Franz-Warkentin grew up on an acreage in southern Manitoba and has reported on agriculture for over 20 years. Based in Winnipeg, his writing has appeared in publications across Canada and internationally. Phil is a trusted voice on the Prairie radio waves providing daily futures market updates. In his spare time, Phil enjoys playing music and making art.

explore

Stories from our other publications