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Home » Corn Closes in the Green

Corn Closes in the Green

July 24, 20253 Mins Read News
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December corn ended the day up 3¼¢ at $4.20¾ per bushel.

November soybeans closed up 1½¢ at $10.24¼ per bushel.

September CBOT wheat ended the day up a penny at $5.41½ per bushel. September KC wheat closed up 5¢ at $5.28½ per bushel. September Minneapolis wheat was up 2½¢ at $5.85½. 

October live cattle closed down $1.35 at $222.15 per hundredweight (cwt). August feeder cattle were down $2.63 at $328.90 per cwt. October lean hogs were up 20¢ at $91.10 per cwt.

Shortly after 2 p.m. CT, September crude oil was up 99¢ at $66.24 per barrel.

Less than ten minutes past 2 p.m. CT, the S&P 500 Index was up 13.79 points and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 225.70 points. 

Published: 2:34 p.m. CT

Corn Up Less Than 2¢ This Morning: 9:29 a.m. CT

As of 9 a.m. CT, December corn was up 1½¢ at $4.19 per bushel.

November soybeans were down less than a penny at $10.22½ per bushel.

September CBOT wheat was down less than a penny at $5.39¾ per bushel. September KC wheat was up 2¢ at $5.25½ per bushel. As of 8:53 a.m. CT, September Minneapolis wheat was up less than a penny at $5.88¾. 

This morning, USDA announced new corn export sales:

  • South Korea is buying 135,000 metric tons of corn for the 2025/2026 marketing year.
  • Unknown destinations are buying 284,196 metric tons of corn — 83,956 metric tons for the 2024/2025 marketing year, and 200,240 metric tons for the 2025/2026 marketing year.

USDA also released the weekly U.S. Export Sales report this morning. The Brock Report offered this commentary of the report:

Corn

“Net U.S. corn export sales for the week ended July 17 came in at 54.2 million bushels, including 25.3 million for 2024/2025 delivery, near the high end of trade expectations that ran 19.5-55 million bushels, and up from the previous week’s sales of 26.1 million bushels, of which only 3.8 million were for 2024/2025 delivery. The export data may be mildly supportive for corn prices.

Source: The Brock Report.

Soybeans

“Net weekly U.S. soybean export sales came in at 14.7 million bushels, including 5.9 million for 2024/2025 delivery, near the low end of trade expectations that ran 14.5-33 million bushels, and [below] the previous week’s sales of 29.5 million bushels…. China was once again absent from the list of buyers. The data looks somewhat negative for soybean prices.

Source: The Brock Report.

Wheat

“Net weekly U.S. wheat export sales came in at 26.2 million bushels, easily topping trade expectations that ran 9-18.5 million bushels and the previous week’s sales of 18.2 million bushels. The sales data looks supportive for wheat futures.”

Source: The Brock Report.

As of 9:01 a.m. CT, October live cattle were down $1.68 at $221.83 per hundredweight (cwt). As of 9 a.m. CT, August feeder cattle were down $3.03 at $328.50 per cwt. October lean hogs were down 33¢ at $90.58 per cwt.

September crude oil was up 78¢ at $66.03 per barrel.

As of 9:01 a.m. CT, the U.S. Dollar Index September contract was up to 96.99.

Ahead of 9 a.m. CT, the S&P 500 Index was up 9.30 points and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 265.33 points. 

Published: 9:29 a.m. CT

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