Sep 17, 2025

Commodity markets daily recap

Posted Sep 17, 2025 8:21 PM

By: NATHAN STUEDLE

GRAINS:

December corn closed down 2 3/4 cents per bushel at $4.26 3/4 and March corn was down 2 1/2 cents at $4.44 1/2. November soybeans closed down 6 cents at $10.43 3/4 and January soybeans were down 6 1/4 cents at $10.63 0/1. December KC wheat closed down 7 1/4 cents at $5.16 1/4, December Chicago wheat was down 5 3/4 cents at $5.28 1/4 and December Minneapolis wheat was down 2 1/2 cents at $5.74.

December corn slipped lower Wednesday after running into some strong selling above. Pressure came from the advancing harvest in some areas while heavy rain fell in parts of the Plains and western Midwest. Bean oil futures fell hard after the EPA put out a vague proposal to reallocate SREs late Tuesday and the uncertainty sent bean oil reeling. Soybeans were pressured by oil as well and wheat and corn fell to sizable losses on Wednesday. Wheat markets fell in unison Wednesday, pressured by heavy rain in the Plains and slowing demand. Pressure also came from the fact that Stats Canada raised wheat production by 700,000 metric tons (mt) to 36.6 mmt. That compares to USDA's 36-mmt estimate.

LIVESTOCK:

With no substantial support arising from anywhere, it comes as no surprise that the live cattle contracts were again trading lower -- but upon seeing the spot December contract growing closer and closer to the market's 40-day moving average, anxiousness has again become the underlying tone of the live cattle complex. The spot December contract is jumping a mere $0.20 above the market's 40-day moving average, which will be the threshold to watch and monitor through the balance of the week. Still no developments have surfaced in this week's fed cash cattle market, but asking prices are now noted at $242 in the South and remain unestablished in the North.

The feeder cattle complex also took the day hard as most of its contracts were trading $4.00 to $5.00 lower into Wednesday's closing bell. Although prices in the countryside remain at a historical high, we are seeing the typical pullback in prices in the countryside as more unweaned and unvaccinated calves are trading.

Without enough support developing in the market's fundamentals, the lean hog contracts were left with no other option but to trade slightly lower. Midday pork cutout values were up slightly, mainly because of the $1.88 gain in the loin and the $1.69 gain in the rib.

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