Tom Leffler News
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U.S. wheat inventories at the end of the current marketing year will be 3.6 percent higher than forecast a month ago because of declining exports, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.
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Corn futures fell, capping the longest slump since 1965, as rain improved prospects for harvests in Brazil and Argentina and U.S. exports lagged behind year-earlier shipments. Soybeans and wheat also declined.
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Wheat futures fell for the first time in three sessions as export data in the U.S., the world’s biggest shipper, signaled lower global demand.
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Wheat rose, capping the biggest weekly gain since July, on signs of improved export demand and as a lingering drought threatens this year’s harvest in the U.S., the world’s largest exporter.
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Farmers in central and eastern Kansas may plant soybeans after harvesting winter wheat because the price spread between the commodities is the widest in at least 20 years, said Tom Leffler, owner of Leffler Commodities LLC.
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Wheat futures fell the most in a week on speculation that earlier gains were exaggerated, because global supplies may be sufficient to meet demand from food companies.
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Wheat futures rose to a four-month high on mounting concern that adverse weather across Europe will reduce production.
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Wheat fell for a third straight day, touching the lowest price in a week, after a government report showed a slump in export sales from the U.S., the world’s largest shipper.
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Wheat fell the most in two weeks on signs that importers are shunning U.S. grain in favor of cheaper supplies from competing exporters.
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Wheat rose for the first time this week as drought persists in the U.S. southern Great Plains, where winter varieties have gone dormant.
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