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Grain futures in Chicago and soybeans are rising after Trump's vow to continue Iran sanctions

The Chicago Board of Trade corn, soybean, and wheat futures all rose on Thursday after U.S. president Donald Trump's televised speech, where he stated that the?"war with Iran" would soon be over, but without giving a specific timeline. Trump stated on Wednesday that the U.S. would carry out aggressive attacks on Iran in the next two-three weeks, and was nearing completion of the main strategic objectives. Grain prices rose in tandem with crude oil, recovering from losses earlier when markets had expected a more dovish tonality from the president.

As of 0209 GMT, the most active soybean contract was up by 0.36% at $11.72-3/4. Wheat rose 0.84%, to $6.02-12 a bushel. Corn?rose by 0.5% to $4.56-12 a bushel.

Analyst?Vitor Pistoia of Rabobank said that "crude oil is a major factor in the price of grains and oilseeds."

This means that higher fertiliser costs will lead to lower inputs, lowering yields. The result is a higher price to maintain profitability for farmers. Increasing oil prices will also encourage biofuel production and support oilseed prices. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced on Tuesday that U.S. Farmers plan to plant more soybeans and less corn in 2026 compared to last year.

Analysts predict that the impact of the Iran War on fuel and fertiliser prices will prompt farmers to shift more acres from corn to soyabeans than the USDA had projected.

Wheat futures have been boosted by the persistent dryness of the U.S. Plains. This is threatening to reduce winter crop yields.

Forecasters said that rains would be beneficial in the U.S. southeast Plains but dryness in western areas will continue to stress crops.

Commodity funds sold CBOT soybeans, corn, wheat and soyoil at a net loss, traders reported on Wednesday. Reporting by Ella Cao, Lewis Jackson and Harikrishnan NaAir; editing by Rashmia Aich and Harikrishnan NAI

(source: Reuters)