The soft red winter wheat (ZWH26), soybean (ZSF26), meal (ZMF26), and soybean oil (ZLF26) markets at present look very heavy and susceptible to more price downside in the near term. However, corn (ZCH26) and hard red winter wheat (KEH26) late last week showed some price strength.
Corn may be the most important grain market to watch in the near term. My grain-market-reporting days on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade nearly 40 years ago remind me that veteran grain traders would tell me, “Corn is king.” The corn market’s resilience late last week, in the face of solid selling pressure in the soybean complex and SRW wheat markets, is one potential bright spot in which King Corn may be attempting to pull the other grains out of their price slumps.
March corn futures last week gained 3 cents, so it was not a bad trading week for the bulls. As the calendar year winds down, look for low-volume trade around the holidays and ahead of the USDA’s January crop production report.
Corn and soybean traders will continue to closely monitor growing conditions for South American crops. In Brazil, a late-planted soybean crop will bring a particular focus on safrinha (second-crop) corn plantings. Weather forecasters say Brazil and Paraguay will see rains through the next two weeks, with enough rain in much of the region to support crop development. In Argentina, a wetter weather pattern will continue in the coming days and benefit crops.
Export demand for U.S. corn has been good over the past few months. While corn futures prices have languished the past few weeks, the hefty U.S. corn sales abroad should keep a floor under futures prices.
January soybean futures last Friday hit a seven-week low and for the week were down 27 1/2 cents. January soybeans, meal and bean oil futures saw technically bearish weekly low closes on Friday as prices are trapped in downtrends on the daily bar charts. This suggests more chart-based selling pressure in the soy complex from the speculators early this week.
Soy complex bulls on Friday got no help from the USDA reporting daily U.S. soybean export sales of 134,000 metric tons of soybeans to China during the 2025-26 marketing year. U.S. trade relations with China will continue to be near the front burner of the soy complex futures markets. China is so far meeting its pledge to the U.S. regarding the amount of U.S. soybeans purchased. However, new and big U.S. arms sales to Taiwan announced last week did not please China, as the negative rhetoric between the two largest economies in the world seems to be rising a bit.


