U.S. grains: Chicago soybeans, corn higher ahead of US-China trade talks

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: May 9, 2025

,

(Medioimages/Photodisc/Getty Images)

Chicago | Reuters—Chicago soybean and corn futures bounced on Friday as traders covered short positions ahead of Saturday’s meeting between senior U.S. and Chinese officials and a widely tracked U.S. Department of Agriculture report on Monday, analysts said.

Front and back month wheat contracts sank to lifetime lows as good weather in the U.S. Plains and lackluster export demand prompted traders and commodity funds to add to already-large short positions.

Most-active Chicago Board of Trade wheat Wv1 futures fell 7-1/2 cents to settle at $5.20-3/4 per bushel, with the July contract WN25 hitting a lifetime low of $5.21-1/2 a bushel.

Read Also

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago. (Vito Palmisano/iStock/Getty Images)

U.S. grains: Wheat futures rise on supply snags in top-exporter Russia

U.S. wheat futures closed higher on Thursday on concerns over the limited availability of supplies for export in Russia, analysts said.

“The wheat market continues to be on a trainwreck,” Terry Linn, vice president at Linn & Associates, said. “Funds are piling on to the short side.”

CBOT soybeans Sv1 rose 6-3/4 cents to $10.51-3/4 per bushel. CBOT corn Cv1 closed 2-1/4 cents higher at $4.49-3/4 per bushel.

The weekend U.S.-China trade talks in Geneva have been described by White House officials as a step towards de-escalating tensions and containing a trade war between the world’s two biggest economies.

The soybean market has been particularly sensitive to the tariff standoff between China, the world’s biggest soybean importer, and the United States, the world’s second-largest exporter of the oilseed.

Export sales of U.S. corn and soybeans have also given support to prices.

However, ideal planting and growing conditions in the U.S. corn and soy belts have put a lid on prices while the upcoming Brazilian corn harvest is expected to pull global demand away from U.S. corn in the coming weeks.

Improving U.S. winter wheat crop conditions and forecast rain in the Black Sea export region have weighed heavily on wheat prices.

Traders were also positioning ahead of the USDA’s world crop report on Monday that will include its first supply and demand balance sheets for 2025–26.

—Additional reporting by Ella Cao and Lewis Jackson in Beijing and Gus Trompiz in Paris

explore

Stories from our other publications