U.S.Midwest Cash Grain - Corn, soy weak amid lack of fresh...

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    U.S.Midwest Cash Grain - Corn, soy weak amid lack of fresh demand:
    CHICAGO, Jan 4 (Reuters) - Spot basis bids for soybeans and
    corn were lower in the U.S. Midwest on Wednesday amid little
    demand for grain and farmer selling on Tuesday, dealers said.
    Farmer selling dried up on Wednesday, except for some
    scattered sales of new-crop soybeans and some old-crop corn.
    Farmers were reluctant to lock in prices on new-crop corn.
    "It's a little too cheap and they don't know where their
    input costs are," said an Ohio dealer.
    Fertilizer prices are expected to increase and the price of
    diesel fuel is already higher than last year.
    Corn bids dropped 1 to 3 cents per bushel with both
    processors and exporters having adequate supplies. Soybean bids
    fell as much as 2 cents, pressured by weak export demand.
    Soybean export sales for the marketing year starting Sept.
    1 were down more than 25 percent compared with the same period
    last year, said the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
    Corn export sales were down 6 percent, according to USDA
    data.
    Barge freight was mostly unchanged from Tuesday in an
    untraded market, said a barge operator.
    At the Chicago Board of Trade, March soybeans rose
    3-3/4 cents to close at $6.32-1/4 per bushel in choppy, thin
    trade.
    March corn fell 1-3/4 cent to close at $2.18-1/4 per
    bushel on a profit-taking setback after Tuesday's rally.
    March soft red winter wheat closed up 1/4 cent at
    $3.46-1/4 per bushel on late technical strength. END




    CBOT soy ends up, wheat firm; corn mostly down- CHICAGO, Jan 4 (Reuters)?:
    WHEAT - March up 1/4 cent at $3.46-1/4 per bushel, deferred months
    up 1/4 to 1-1/2 cents.
    Turned up late on technical strength with FIMAT Futures buying 1,500
    March and Citigroup bought 1,100 March. Options-related buying also buoyed
    wheat near the close, traders said. Wheat was lower most of the day on a
    profit-taking setback after Tuesday's fund-driven climb. Some added pressure
    from concerns that the recent rally could hurt export sales of U.S. wheat.
    Fundamentals provided little new direction Wednesday.
    * Fund buying at 4,000 to 5,000 lots.
    * Exports were quiet overnight.
    * The nine-day relative strength index for March stood at 71 ahead of the
    open. Traders view an RSI of 70 or higher as one sign of an overbought
    market.
    * Meteorlogix weather said there were no signs of cold weather in the U.S.
    winter wheat region that could harm the crop. But there were few signs of
    much rainfall in the forecast for the Plains hard red winter belt or the
    Midwest soft red winter growing area.
    * Cash basis bids for soft red winter wheat were steady to weak in the
    Midwest early on Wednesday.

    CORN - March down 1-3/4 cents at $2.18-1/4 per bushel, deferreds
    down 1-1/2 to up 1/4.
    Profit-taking setback after Tuesday's strong fund-driven close. Exports
    were quiet overnight. Weak cash markets weigh, with an increase in farmer
    selling noted during Tuesday's rally.
    * Funds sold 4,000 contracts. Rand Financial and Calyon Financial noted
    sellers, traders said.
    * The nine-day relative strength index for March stood at 71 ahead of the
    open. Traders view an RSI of 70 or higher as indicating an overbought market.
    * Export activity overnight included news Taiwan Sugar canceled a tender
    set for Thursday to buy U.S. corn and soy. And Taiwan's MFIG set a tender for
    Friday to buy between 56,000 and 60,000 tonnes of U.S. corn.
    * Private forecaster Meteorlogix said hot and dry weather in Argentina
    would be stressing the corn and soybean crops. There is a chance for rain
    late next week, Meteorlogix said. Crop weather currently is favorable in
    Brazil but there is some concern about outlooks for hotter and drier weather
    for the next week or more, Meteorlogix said.
    * Cash basis bids for corn in the Midwest were weak on Wednesday and
    farmer selling slowed after the increased sales on Tuesday.

    SOYBEANS - January up 3-1/2 cents at $6.21 per bushel, March
    up 3-3/4 at $6.32-1/4.
    Turning higher in choppy, thin trade, brokers said. Concerns about hot
    and dry weather in Argentina's soy areas and outlooks for drier weather in
    Brazil help underpin values.
    * Fund buying totaled 1,000 to 1,500 lots. DT Trading bought 600 March
    while Rand net sold 300 March and ADM Investor Services sold 200 March,
    traders said.
    * The nine-day relative strength index for March stood at 67 ahead of the
    open. Traders view an RSI of 70 or higher as a sign of an overbought market.
    * Private forecaster Meteorlogix said hot and dry weather in Argentina
    would be stressing the corn and soybean crops. There is a chance for rain
    late next week, Meteorlogix said. Crop weather currently is favorable in
    Brazil but there is some concern about outlooks for hotter and drier weather
    for the next week or more, Meteorlogix said.
    * Exports continue to lag USDA projections. But there was talk on Tuesday
    that China bought two or three cargoes of U.S. soybeans early this week,
    traders said.
    * Deliveries on the January contract totaled 416 lots. An R.J. O'Brien
    customer issued 173 lots and a J.P. Morgan customer posted 165. Key stoppers
    included an Infinium customer taking 186 and a customer of Banc of America
    stopped 100 lots.
    * Registrations with the CBOT increased to 1,908 lots from the previous
    1,743.
    * Cash basis bids for soy in the Midwest were weak on Wednesday and
    farmer selling slowed after the increased sales on Tuesday.

    SOYMEAL - January down $3.10 per ton at $195.10 per ton, March
    down 80 cents at $196.90.
    Bunge bear-spread 800 March/January which led to talk of possible
    commercial deliveries on the January contract on Thursday.
    * Funds sold 1,500 lots.
    * No deliveries were posted against the January contract on Wednesday.
    * Registrations with the CBOT were unchanged at 240 lots.

    SOYOIL - January up 0.26 at 23.22 cents per lb, March up
    0.36 at 23.60 cents.
    Turned higher on technical buying, with March climbing back above its
    200-day moving average. Bullish tone in energy markets supportive. Strength
    in January limited by heavy commercial deliveries.
    * Funds bought 4,000 lots.
    * There were 1,266 January deliveries. The ADM house account issued 1,049
    lots after being a big stopper on Tuesday. An Iowa Grain customer on
    Wednesday stopped 861 lots and a Henning customer stopped 359 lots.
    * CBOT registrations were unchanged at 5,211 lots.
    * Malaysian palm oil futures closed firm overnight.
    ** Dollar slides on U.S. rate outlook.
    ** U.S. stocks inch lower, despite strength in tech sector.
 
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