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MARKET DEVELOPMENT
GRAINS-Soybeans Climb 1 Percent, Led By Global Vegetable Oils
calendar18-10-2016 | linkReuters | Share This Post:

* Soybeans buoyed by palm oil, U.S. soy export inspections
* Corn lower after Dec contract falls short of Friday's high
* Wheat firm on short-covering, export business

18/10/2016 (Reuters) - Front-month U.S. soybean futures rose about 1 percent on Monday, hitting a three-week high on export demand and renewed strength in global vegetable oil markets, analysts said.

Wheat futures firmed on fund short-covering while corn was mixed in choppy trade.

At the Chicago Board of Trade, benchmark November soybean futures were up 12-1/2 cents at $9.75 per bushel after reaching $9.78-3/4, the contract's highest since Sept. 22.

December wheat was up 2-3/4 cents at $4.23-3/4 a bushel and December corn was down 1 cent at $3.53-1/4 a bushel.

Soybeans drew support as the December Malaysian palm oil contract surged more than 4 percent, partly on
forecasts of weaker production growth for the month of October.
 
"Palm oil is leading the charge and beans follow that," said Don Roose, president of U.S. Commodities in West Des Moines, Iowa.

The soy market got another boost when the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported export inspections of U.S. soybeans in the latest week at 2.5 million tonnes, above a range of trade estimates for 1.3 million to 1.6 million tonnes.
 
The National Oilseed Processors Association said its members crushed 129.405 million bushels of soybeans in September, above an average of trade estimates for 127.7 million.

NOPA reported U.S. soyoil stocks at the end of September at 1.376 billion lbs, down from 1.620 billion a month earlier and tighter than the average trade estimate of 1.500 billion.

Corn futures turned lower, retreating from early advances after the spot December contract failed to match Friday's 2-1/2-month high of $3.58-3/4.

Farmer selling played a role as the U.S. harvest continued. Farmers have been reluctant sellers of corn this autumn, opting to store much of the crop and hold out for higher prices. But some growers have been taking advantage of a roughly 30-cent rally in the December futures contract since Sept. 30, Roose said.

Ahead of the USDA's weekly crop progress report due later on Monday, analysts surveyed by Reuters expected the government to show the U.S. soybean harvest as 62 percent complete and the corn harvest as 49 percent complete.

Wheat futures firmed for a third straight session on technical buying, including fund-driven short-covering and a pick-up in global wheat export business.

The latest deal was Monday's 610,000-tonne hard wheat purchase by Saudi Arabia.

    CBOT prices as of 12:40 p.m. CDT (1740 GMT):

                         Last    Net     Pct    Volume
                                change  change 
 CBOT wheat      WZ6    423.25    2.25     0.5   55386
 CBOT corn       CZ6    353.50   -0.75    -0.2  111721
 CBOT soybeans   SX6    975.00   12.50     1.3  107821
 CBOT soymeal    SMZ6   302.00    1.40     0.5   28828
 CBOT soyoil     BOZ6    35.38    1.00     2.9   71586

    CBOT wheat, corn and soybeans shown in cents per bushel, soymeal in dollars per short ton and soyoil in cents per lb.