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DTN Midday Grain Comments 11/20 11:51
Soybean Complex Firm; Corn, Wheat Trade Lower
Soybean trade remains firm, with the market hanging onto our big weekly
gains. Corn and wheat are lower in slow trade at midday.
By David Fiala
DTN Contributing Analyst
OUTSIDE MARKET SUMMARY:
The U.S. stock market indices are lower with the Dow futures down 67. The
interest rate products are higher. The dollar index is 35 higher. Energies are
lower with crude down $.80 cents. Cattle and hogs are higher. Precious metals
are flat.
General Comments
Corn
Corn trade is 2 lower at midday in slow trade. Corn has been lower due to
the outside markets, with the higher soybean trade limiting downside. The
December option expiration is today, and it does not seem like the trade wants
the market neither over $4 nor under $3.90. So the rest of the session could be
slow with December trade in the mid $3.90 area. The negative outside market
action and pre-hedging ahead of the weekend would suggest there is a greater
chance for a sell-off than a rally into the close. The chart argument remains
positive and would suggest the opposite.
Soybeans
Soybean trade is firmer at midday with January up 5 and November new crop up
a penny. Meal is $1.50 lower and bean oil is 15 higher. The outside market
pressure may limit buying interest and push beans lower as we move into the
afternoon. Nearby January resistance is up at $10.65, which was the August
high. The January contract is moving into overbought territory, so a correction
would not be a surprise even if you want to remain bullish. Support is down
around the $10 level. The chart remains friendly as long as it stays above $10.
The good demand numbers seen this week have supported the higher move. With the
soybean harvest moving over 90 percent complete, the limited harvest selling
pressure has allowed the strong move this week. The low on November 9 was
$9.50, and the high today was $10.50 -- an impressive rally during harvest with
yields and carryovers getting larger.
Wheat
Wheat trade is 5 to 8 lower at midday across the three exchanges. The tone
is flat with mixed spillover direction due to lower corn trade and higher
beans. There is a lack of fresh supportive news that has limited buying
interest and may lead to more longs taking profits ahead of the weekend. The
chart remains positive. The fundamentals continue to remain poor. The recent
rally has the U.S. priced out of the world market so do not expect export
activity to pick up any time soon. Egypt is the number one importer of U.S.
wheat. Their sales are down 70 percent year to date versus last year. Yesterday
Egypt tendered for 175,000 tons of Russian wheat, which was originally
announced as a U.S. sale. The higher dollar suggests a weak close.
David Fiala is a DTN contributing analyst and the President of FuturesOne
and a registered Commodity Trading Advisor.
(KM)
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