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Recap for December 6
- Wheat complex futures pared gains Wednesday except for the Chicago March contract, which edged higher. Wheat futures initially popped higher after a third consecutive day where the USDA has confirmed private sales of US soft red winter wheat to China for a total volume over one million tonnes since Monday. Corn turned lower as market participants wrestled with a forecast of much-needed rain in South America easing anxiety about drought damage to yields. Soybean futures felt that pressure, too, declining despite word of fresh sales of 136,000 tonnes of US soybeans to China. December corn futures fell 3¾¢ to close at $4.64¾ per bu. Chicago December wheat fell 5¢ to close at $6.15¾ per bu; The March contract added 2¼¢ a bu, but all contracts beyond declined. Kansas City December wheat fell 6¾¢ to close at $6.50¾ per bu. Minneapolis December wheat fell 8¢ to close at $7.07 per bu. January soybeans fell 10¢ to close at $12.95½ per bu. December soybean meal was down $9.30 to close at $424.40 per ton. December soybean oil dropped 0.93¢ to close at 49.29¢ a lb.
- Major US stock indexes flitted between narrow gains and losses Wednesday before settling near session lows. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note slid to 4.21% after an ADP National Employment Report indicated hiring among US private-sector employees unexpectedly slowed in November, with pay gains also moderating, a further signal for the Federal Reserve that the economy is cooling ahead of its meeting next week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 70.13 points, or 0.19%, to close at 36,054.43. The Standard & Poor’s 500 dropped 17.84 points, or 0.39%, to close at 4,549.34. The Nasdaq Composite shed 83.2 points, or 0.58%, to close at 14,146.71.
- US crude oil prices continued lower again Wednesday. The January West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude future was down $2.94 to close at $69.38 per barrel.
- The US dollar index strengthened for a third straight day Wednesday after posting mostly declines last week.
- US gold futures climbed Wednesday despite the dollar’s enduring ascent. The December contract added $12 to close at $2,030.50 per oz.
Recap for December 5
- Hard wheat futures were higher and Chicago soft wheat futures soared Tuesday after the USDA confirmed a second straight purchase of the variety by China, bringing the two-day total to 638,000 tonnes. Corn was higher for a fifth straight session and soybean futures were mixed in a thin range as traders watched Brazilian weather forecasts that could bring much needed relief to crops in the region. December corn futures added 8¼¢ to close at $4.68½ per bu. Chicago December wheat jumped 25¢ to close at $6.20¾ per bu; furthest deferred months declined. Kansas City December wheat advanced 1¼¢ to close at $6.57½ per bu. Minneapolis December wheat added 3¾¢ to close at $7.15 per bu. January soybeans eased ¾¢ to close at $13.05½ per bu; later months were mixed in minuscule ranges. December soybean meal was up $11.40 to close at $433.70 per ton. December soybean oil dropped 0.97¢ to close at 50.22¢ a lb.
- A rally in bonds resumed Tuesday, sending benchmark 10-year US notes to their lowest levels since summer. The tech-heavy Nasdaq came out a winner at closing bells, but broader stock indices declined as consumer-discretionary and tech shares failed to offset declines in utilities, energy, materials and real-estate stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 79.88 points, or 0.22%, to close at 36,126.56. The Standard & Poor’s 500 eased 2.60 points, or 0.06%, to close at 4,567.18. The Nasdaq Composite added 44.42 points, or 0.31%, to close at 14,229.91.
- US crude oil prices continued lower Tuesday. The January West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude future was down 72¢ to close at $72.32 per barrel.
- The US dollar index strengthened again on Tuesday.
- US gold futures continued lower as the dollar climbed. The December contract fell $5.60 to close at $2,018.50 per oz.
Recap for December 4
- US wheat futures shot higher Monday, Chicago soft wheat by 3% to six-week highs, after the US Department of Agriculture confirmed private sales of 440,000 tonnes of US soft red winter wheat to China, which more than offset crop estimate increases in Canada and Australia and export inspections that came in below expectations. Favorable export inspections led to mixed closes for corn, but soybean inspections for export were below expectations and futures declined. December corn futures fell 4¼¢ to close at $4.60¼ per bu; later months were mixed in a narrow range. Chicago December wheat jumped 18¾¢ to close at $5.95¾ per bu. Kansas City December wheat advanced 11¼¢ to close at $6.56¼ per bu. Minneapolis December wheat added 8¾¢ to close at $7.11¼ per bu. January soybeans fell 18¾¢ to close at $13.06¼ per bu. December soybean meal was down $3 to close at $422.30 per ton. December soybean oil dropped 0.19¢ to close at 51.19¢ a lb.
- Higher bond yields weighed on large technology companies’ shares Monday and dragged the broader stock market lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 41.06 points, or 0.11%, to close at 36,204.44. The Standard & Poor’s 500 dropped 24.85 points, or 0.54%, to close at 4,569.78. The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 119.54 points, or 0.84%, to close at 14,185.49.
- US crude oil prices continued lower Monday. The January West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude future was down $1.03 to close at $73.04 per barrel.
- The US dollar index opened the week climbing.
- US gold futures dropped as the dollar strengthened on Monday. The December contract sank $46.90 to close at $2,024.10 per oz.
Recap for December 1
- Rain crucial to crop development popped up in forecasts for export competitor Brazil, pressuring US soybean futures at week’s end. Corn and most wheat futures advanced in another round of short covering. December corn futures added 2¾¢ to close at $4.64½ per bu. Chicago December wheat added 6¾¢ to close at $5.77 per bu. Kansas City December wheat added 1¾¢ to close at $6.45 per bu. Minneapolis December wheat was steady at $7.02½ per bu. January soybeans fell 17¾¢ to close at $13.25 per bu. December soybean meal was down $16.90 to close at $425.30 per ton. December soybean oil dropped 0.91¢ to close at 51.38¢ a lb.
- The Nasdaq reversed course for a win and the S&P 500 and Dow industrials indexes continued higher to close the week after Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell said the central bank’s policy is “well into restrictive territory,” a signal that rate hikes could be finished. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 294.61 points, or 0.82%, to close at 36,245.50, up 2.4% for the week, a fifth straight weekly gain, its longest win streak since late 2021. The Standard & Poor’s 500 added 26.83 points, or 0.59%, to close at 4,594.63, up 0.8% for the week to its highest level since March 2022. The Nasdaq Composite added 78.81 points, or 0.55%, to close at 14,305.03, posting a 0.4% weekly gain.
- US crude oil prices continued lower Friday. The January West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude future was down $1.89 to close at $74.07 per barrel.
- The US dollar index dropped lower to close the week after several stronger days.
- US gold futures advanced Friday. The December contract soared $32.90 to close at $2,071 per oz.
Recap for November 30
- US equity markets were mixed Thursday, the tech-centric Nasdaq posting a decline. But the Dow Industrials index soared on the last day of November after a Commerce Department report showed Americans slowed spending and that inflation continued to pull back in October, increasing investors’ hopes the US central bank would hold the line on raising interest rates. All three major indexes posted gains of at least 8% in November, ending three-month losing streaks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average soared 520.47 points, or 1.47%, to close at 35,950.89. The Standard & Poor’s 500 added 17.22 points, or 0.38%, to close at 4,567.80. The Nasdaq Composite lost 32.27 points, or 0.23%, to close at 14,226.22.
- Wheat futures continued higher Thursday after the US Department of Agriculture indicated 2023-24 US wheat export sales in the week ended Nov. 23 at 622,800 tonnes, a six-week high that topped a range of trade expectations for 200,000 to 500,000 tonnes. Wheat and corn futures also were supported by short covering after slumps to multi-year lows. Soybean futures were rangebound and closed lower despite reports of private sales of US supplies to China. December corn futures added 12¢ to close at $4.61¾ per bu. Chicago December wheat added 14¼¢ to close at $5.70¼ per bu. Kansas City December wheat added 3¼¢ to close at $6.43¼ per bu. Minneapolis December wheat added 5¾¢ to close at $7.02½ per bu. January soybeans fell 4¼¢ to close at $13.42¾ per bu; September 2024 and beyond were narrowly higher. December soybean meal was down $2.10 to close at $442.20 per ton. December soybean oil dropped 0.39¢ to close at 52.29¢ a lb.
- US crude oil prices turned lower Thursday. The January West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude future was down $1.90 to close at $75.96 per barrel.
- The US dollar index continued higher Thursday.
- US gold futures declined Thursday. The December contract fell $9 to close at $2,038.10 per oz.
Ingredient Markets
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