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GRAINS-Chicago corn, wheat and soybeans all rise as crude oil gains continue to drive up prices

Chicago wheat reached a ten-month high on Monday, with corn and'soybeans rising as well following gains in crude oil. U.S. - Iran peace?talks stalled causing Gulf shipping to be blocked.

Chicago Board of Trade?most-active?Wheat increased 0.8% to reach $6.22 per bushel at 0936 GMT. It reached its highest level since June 2025. Soybeans increased by 0.2%, to $11.81-3/4 bushels. Corn was up by 1.0%, at $4.68-1/4 bushels.

Johnny Xiang of Beijing's AgRadar Consulting said that the main influence on prices is the rising crude oil price. The grain markets were supported by the rising?crude prices which rose nearly 3% on monday, and the closing of the Strait of Hormuz a major outlet for fertilisers, since corn and soybeans feedstocks for Biofuels.

One European trader stated that wheat importers had been delaying purchases due to high prices, in the hope that a?peace agreement with Iran would push down?markets. Saudi Arabian state purchasing agency GFSA bought 985,000 metric tonnes of wheat on Monday in an international auction. The shipment was restricted to Red Sea ports in Saudi Arabia to avoid the blockage of the Hormuz Strait, at the Gulf's entrance.

Traders anticipate a meeting between U.S. president Donald Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping in mid-May, hoping that China will agree to additional purchases of U.S. soya beans and other agricultural products. The robust export demand has boosted corn prices, with another South Korean corn order reported on Monday.

Early?U.S. The soybean and corn crop is progressing well, but storms in the Midwest could delay seeding.

Traders are watching the rain forecast for?the Central United States. This could ease the stress on wheat crops that have been parched by drought. Reporting by Ella Cao in Beijing, Lewis Jackson in Hamburg and Kirshmi Donovan in New York; editing by Rashmi aich and Kirshmi Donovan

(source: Reuters)