By Michael Hirtzer
CHICAGO, March 27 (Reuters) – U.S. wheat climbed as much as
2 percent in a bargain-buying bounce on Friday, rebounding after
three sessions of steep declines that dragged futures into
technically oversold territory.
Soybean and corn futures each were lower at the Chicago
Board of Trade with investors in all three trading pits squaring
their books ahead of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
prospective plantings report due next week.
Wheat shed more than 4 percent for the week despite Friday’s
gains, following scattered showers in the United States and
forecasts for crop-friendly precipitation in Ukraine and Russia.
“Funds are short (wheat). So as we are getting closer to the
report, they’re evening up a bit,” said Don Roose, analyst at
brokerage U.S. Commodities in Iowa.
CBOT May wheat settled up 8-1/2 cents to $5.07-3/4
per bushel. CBOT May corn edged 1/4 cent lower to $3.91
but gained 1.7 percent for the week, for the second straight
weekly gain.
Soybeans were lower for the day and the week, with soybeans
for May delivery finishing 7-1/4 cents lower at $9.67-1/4
per bushel and losing 0.6 percent for the week.
Soybeans eased four sessions in a row as farmers continued
to gather record soy harvests in South America.
“There is little fresh news as traders zero in on Tuesday’s
key planting and stocks reports,” analyst Richard Brock said in
a note to clients. “The South American crop continues to look
strong, with drier conditions in Argentina boosting the outlook
there.”
Outlooks for warm and dry conditions over the next 10 days
in Argentina should allow harvest there to advance after
excessively wet weather this month left fields muddy,
meteorologists said.
USDA next week is likely to show farmers in the United
States boosting soybean plantings at the expense of corn acres
this spring, a Reuters poll showed.
However, with global crop stockpiles of each crop plentiful
and futures still near last year’s multiyear lows, the growers
may struggle to turn profits, Roose said.
(Additional reporting by Gus Trompiz in Paris and Colin Packham
in Sydney; Editing by James Dalgleish and Alan Crosby)