π Prices:
- November Soybeans (SX): $10.46 1/4, up 12 3/4 cents
- January Soybeans (SF): $10.65 1/4, up 12 3/4 cents
- October Soybean Meal (MV): $287.60, up $1.50/ton
- October Soybean Oil (LV): 51.67, up 0.59 cents/lb
- November/January Spread (SX/SF): -19, unchanged
- For the week: SX was up 19 3/4 cents; SF was up 19 3/4 cents; MV was up $7.0/ton; LV was up 0.86 cents/lb
π Market Headlines:
- Private exporters this morning reported daily export sales flashes of 22,000 MTs of soybean oil for delivery to South Korea during the 2025/26 marketing year. This is the first flash bean oil sale since March.
- WASDE this morning pegged average US soybean yield at 53.5 bu/acre, down 0.1 from last month, but like corn, production was nonetheless higher as planted and harvested area were each adjusted higher by 200k acres a piece; this put production at 4.301 bil bu. At the state level, there are 8 states expected to either set or tie all-time yield records.
- As for the rest of the balance sheet, there were next to no changes made to the old crop, while the new crop sheet saw crush adjusted higher by 15 mil bu while exports were adjusted lower by 20 mil bu. This, along with the production adjustment, led to ending stocks increasing 10 mil bu to 300 mil bu.
- At the world level, ending stocks were lowered slightly from last month to 123.99 MMTs; USDA made no production adjustments in either Brazil or Argentina, while Chinese soybean imports were left unchanged from last month in both the old and new crop.
- In the products, meal exports were adjusted 500k MTs higher to 19.2 MMTs, while production was also increased 375k MTs. For oil, domestic use was up 150 mil lbs and production was up 180 mil lbs; there was no change made to exports.
Summary:
Perhaps more surprising than the increase in corn acres was the subsequent increase in soybean acres also, which led production here to tick higher despite yield being down slightly from last month. Last month when corn area was increased, there was a trade-off at the expense of soybean acres but that was not the case this go around. With there not being a lot of other notable balance sheet adjustments here otherwise, we would expect trader attention next week to quickly return to the China situation, with US and Chinese officials expected to hold meetings in Spain next week. The market will likely remain hyper-sensitive to any sort of headline regarding China, which along with harvest starting in the US, means one should be prepared for a possibly choppier than normal week next week.
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