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GRAINS - Chicago soybeans fall on favorable weather and weaker soyoil

GRAINS - Chicago soybeans fall on favorable weather and weaker soyoil

Chicago soybean futures declined on Tuesday after a two-day rally, due to favorable weather conditions for U.S. crops and lower soyoil price.

As of 0222 GMT the most active soybean contract fell 0.23%, to $10.67 a bushel. This halted gains fueled by surging crude prices and stricter U.S. biofuel blend mandates.

On Monday, soybeans reached a new high of one month and soyoil an all-time high of 20 months.

Analysts say that tensions between Iran and Israel could cause energy prices to rise, causing a spike in grain prices.

Andrew Whitelaw is an agricultural consultant with Episode 3. The region has a major impact on the grain markets.

The Soyoil Contract dropped by 0.85% to 54.64 cents a pound as traders made profits and removed some support for soybeans.

Oilseeds continue to be affected by a weakening demand, uncertainty over tariffs and global competition.

The price of corn fell 0.06%, to $4.35 per bushel. This was due to the weekend rains that were beneficial for key growing areas, such as the Plains, the Northwest and Southeast Midwest, and parts of the Plains.

However, strong export data helped curb losses.

The latest U.S. corn harvest inspections reached 1.67 million tons, which is higher than expected.

According to U.S. Government data, the weekly condition ratings of the corn crop in the United States also improved. They were the highest they had been for several years at this time. Soybean ratings declined.

The price of a bushel rose by 0.84%, to $5.41. However, harvest pressures limited gains.

After a slow start, the U.S. harvest of winter wheat is now expanding. The USDA reported that the winter wheat harvest was 10%, up from just 4% one week earlier but still behind the average for the past five years of 16%. Analysts had on average estimated harvest progress as 11%.

Traders said that commodity funds bought soyoil contracts at the Chicago Board of Trade on Monday, but sold corn, soybeans, soymeal and wheat futures.

(source: Reuters)