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War and weather focus on March gains for EU wheat

Euronext Wheat rose on Tuesday to confirm a gain for the month as dry weather threatened U.S. Harvest prospects and the latest developments in Iran war boosted gains on wider markets.

The euro's sharp rise against the dollar has slowed down Tuesday's gains on 'Euronext'. The grain markets also took in the U.S. plantation estimates. The data surprised traders because it showed corn acres far above the average expectation of analysts, who were expecting a greater shift to soybeans due to rising fuel and fertilizer costs.

Euronext's benchmark May milling wheat settled at 204.75 euro per metric ton, up 0.5%. The contract increased 1.6% in March, its third consecutive monthly gain. However, the increase was less than a 4.4% leap in February.

Chicago wheat prices rose by more than 1%.

Brent crude oil was on course to set a new monthly record, as news of an attack on a tanker in the Middle East heightened supply concerns.

The broader market was buoyed by a report that U.S. President Donald Trump told his aides that he would be willing to end this war, even if the Strait of Hormuz remained largely closed.

The price of grains has largely tracked the price of crude oil since the Iran War, a reflection of the use corn for biofuels as well as the rising costs associated with energy and fertilisers.

The impact of the war in Iran on the wheat demand was also being assessed by traders.

Tunisia won a tender to purchase 100,000 tons of soft grain at a price of $274.73 per tonne cost and freight. This was higher than the previous tender of $271.69. Jordan, on the other hand, completed its purchase of 60,000 tonnes of hard wheat at $275.95 per ton cost and freight (c&f), lower than $277.50 per ton paid in a tender held on March 17.

The traders reported that for the April/May shipment,?Russian, Polish/Baltic and 12.5% Wheat was priced between $238 and $239 per ton (free on board) while German and Romanian wheat was priced between $240 and $243 per ton.

U.S. hard-red winter wheat remains less competitive with a price of more than $279 per ton FOB. U.S. prices have increased as the drought has worsened conditions for crops. The European Union's soft wheat exports have risen 7% on an annual basis to 17.48 million metric tons so far this year, according to data released by the European Commission on Tuesday.

Other traders were puzzled by a sudden jump in Danish barley imports to China.

(source: Reuters)