By: NATHAN STUEDLE
GRAINS:
December corn closed up 2 1/4 cents and March corn was up 2 1/2 cents. January soybeans closed down 2 3/4 cents and March soybeans were down 1 1/4 cents. December KC wheat closed down 3 1/4 cents, December Chicago wheat was up 1/4 cents, December Minneapolis wheat was up 5 1/4 cents.
In honor of Veterans Day, U.S. banks as well as the bond market was closed on Tuesday. Canadian markets were also closed for Remembrance Day. Naturally, the resulting trade in grain futures was a low volume and stable session. It is likely we will see activity pick up toward the end of the week as traders begin to position around the first WASDE report since early September, which is due out on Friday at 11 a.m. CST. Outside markets were mostly positive influence on ag markets for Tuesday, with energy futures moving higher and the diesel market impressive at its highest price since late June. The U.S. dollar continues to retreat from last week's highs while stocks were mostly positive Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average riding a 3-day bullish wave spurred on by optimism that the government will soon reopen following the Senate's successful vote on the funding package which will now go back to the House for approval.
LIVESTOCK:
Live cattle futures traded mixed for the bulk of Tuesday's session, which is a general disappointment following the sharp limit gains Monday, strong triple digit support in feeder cattle futures, and active gains in morning boxed beef values. But the good news in nearby live cattle futures is that prices have bounced back from triple-digit losses seen early in the trading day and ended close to near steady. Which would put prices still sharply higher for the week. Cash cattle is starting with another slow start to the day with some early asking prices starting out around $232-plus in the South, but they are still not established in the North. Significant trade volume will likely be delayed until Wednesday or later. Beef cutouts are expected to be mixed with light to moderate box movement.
Feeder cattle futures continued the Monday rally with active triple-digit gains seen in all contract months for the bulk of the session, only to give most of that back before the closing bell. With prices closing at limit gains Monday, the ability to utilize expanded trade limits creates optimism but also uncertainty within the market. Currently prices are far from reaching the expanded trade limits, which would allow markets to revert back to normal limits Wednesday if markets close near the current levels. Traders are trying to rebound from recent losses, but it is uncertain just how much additional short-term fundamental support remains within the feeder cattle complex.
Lean hog futures remain generally quiet on Veterans Day with narrow trade ranges seen through the complex. At midday, the spot month December contracts remained the only contract trading with a negative value, but the losses were minimal as traders adjusted to the early week rally seen across the complex. Narrow gains seen in spring months focusing on the hope of additional pork demand kindling through the export market. But for now, very few traders are willing to break away from Monday's active gains.







