U.S. grains: Soybeans tick up as market weighs crops, U.S.-China ties

.

By 
Karl Plume
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: October 7, 2025

,

Exterior of the Chicago Board of Trade building.

Chicago | Reuters — U.S. soybean futures firmed on Tuesday on technical and seasonal buying after two sessions of losses, as traders monitored U.S. harvesting, Brazilian planting progress and updates on trade negotiations with China and a U.S. farmer bailout package.

Corn eased under pressure from a likely record-large U.S. crop, although losses were limited by expectations that yields would fall short of the forecasts.

Wheat retreated, pressured by ample global supplies.

Grains markets have remained range-bound as a U.S. government shutdown deprived traders of key U.S. Department of Agriculture data including harvesting progress and production updates.

Read Also

Farm manager Gao Qinshan feeds pigs in a pig pen at a farm in Taizhou, Jiangsu province, China January 15, 2026. Output from January through March in the world’s largest pork-producing country surged to 16.69 million metric tons, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed. Photo: REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo

China’s Q1 pork output up 4.2 per cent from a year earlier, lags expectations

China’s pork production rose 4.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2026 from a year earlier as hog producers accelerated slaughtering to address a supply glut.

Chicago Board of Trade November soybeans SX25 settled up 4-1/4 cents at $10.22 per bushel. December corn CZ25 was down 2 cents at $4.19-3/4 a bushel and CBOT December wheat WZ25 was down 6 cents at $5.06-3/4 a bushel.

“Seasonally, soybeans tend to bottom at the beginning of October. We’re probably 50 per cent harvested by now, farmer selling has been light and the end-user is scrambling a little bit for coverage for the crush,” said Don Roose, president of U.S. Commodities.

“And the corn harvest is starting to pick up momentum,” he said.

Traders are looking ahead to a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping. They are expected to discuss U.S. soybean exports to top importer China, which has shunned U.S. beans during a trade war.

Trump’s administration is set to announce this week a U.S. farmer bailout plan worth as much as $15 billion.

The aid may be neutral or slightly bullish for the market depending on its size, said Andrey Sizov, head of Sovecon, adding there was no sign of progress toward resuming soybean trade.

“I remain skeptical about any breakthrough here in 2025. China is well covered and probably could try to play this card later, in 2026 closer to the midterms,” he said, referring to U.S. congressional elections.

— Additional reporting by Gus Trompiz in Paris and Peter Hobson in Canberra

explore

Stories from our other publications