Friday, June 13, 2025
Closing Markets: Corn +6 old & +2.50 new.
Beans +27.50 old & new. Wheat +17.25.
Market Recap:
Good afternoon! Not a lot of headlines in the corn market Friday, as strength in the wheat and soybean markets generally pulled values higher throughout the day. Traders seem to continue to be uninterested in the relatively tight new crop balance sheet due at least in part to the fact that they assume exports are currently overstated. As we go into next week, weather will continue to be the primary driver of price action, as an ongoing mix of rain and sunshine will give funds little reason to exit their short positions ahead of the June stocks and acreage report due out at the end of the month. Soybean market headlines were dominated by biofuel policy announcements on Friday, as the EPA this morning proposed biomass-based diesel blending rates for 2026 at 5.61 bil gallons and for 2027 at 5.86 bil gallons; this was well above what the industry had anticipated after erroneous reports were released yesterday indicating the level was likely to be smaller. In its announcement, the EPA also indicated it intended to cut RIN values for imported feedstocks by 50%; Last year, imported feedstocks, including UCO, accounted for roughly 45% of biomass-based diesel production. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, sources also indicated that the EPA intends to announce a decision on small refinery exemptions before finalizing today's proposed blending requirement, but not a lot of other details were given. Next steps on the overall situation now include a public comment hearing scheduled for July 8th and 9th, so it will at least be several more weeks before anything is finalized. Due to today's limit move in bean oil, Monday will see expanded trading limits of 4.5 cents/lb in bean oil, $30/ton in soybean meal, and $1.15/bu in soybeans. Not really a specific reason for Friday's wheat rally; buying was likely related to increasing tensions in the Middle East and there was also probably some measure of profit taking by shorts going into the weekend. Weather forecasts continue to look generally favorable for harvest in the southwestern part of the US Wheat Belt, though areas further east have seen rains that will likely slow things down for a few days. Crude oil futures spent the day trading sharply higher following an overnight escalation of tensions in the Middle East; Israel struck dozens of Iranian nuclear and military targets, while Iran pledged retaliation. Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu said the operation would likely take "weeks". The US and Iran were scheduled to have another round of nuclear talks on Sunday, but sources have indicated that Iranian representation does not intend on attending the meeting despite repeated assertations from the US that they were not involved in the strikes. Weather forecasts going into the weekend and next week are continuing to show an active pattern, with multiple storm systems expected to provide rainfall to the Midwest. The European model, which has been the more accurate of the two, is noticeably wetter than the GFS both in the northern Corn Belt and along the Gulf, but both models agree on further rainfall accompanying the coming increase temperatures, which will be net-neutral for crop development. The temperature forecast into next week is like it’s been all this past week in showing increasing temperatures in the eastern US in the coming days. The west will stay comparatively warmer, but cool air pockets across the whole of the US will be limited through next week. Extended precip forecasts into the last week of January have continued to fluctuate but have trended direr in the eastern US over the past 24 hours than they were the rest of this week. The northern part of the US along the Canadian border looks to stay wet, but the models are less confident this afternoon on rainfall any further to the south. There continues to be concern over high pressure ridging across the central US into the end of June, but that models are keeping with a more progressive pattern is seemingly lessening the chances of a prolonged hot/dry spell through pollination, at least as it stands today.
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Enjoy the night!
Bailey Runyen
Grain Originator | Topflight Grain Coop.
101 N. Main St. | Cisco, IL 61830
Phone :: 217-669-2141
Email :: brunyen@tfgrain.com
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