PDF Attached
WTI
crude oil and related products were a concern for most US commodity markets, along with a higher USD. USDA revealed little changes to US and world demand, although some respects should be noted to lower US soybean crush. Fundamentals and world economic outlooks
have not changed. We remain concerned over global recession.
Full
USDA versus estimate tabled attached
WORLD
WEATHER HIGHLIGHTS FOR JULY 12, 2022
•
U.S. Weather is still a little tenuous with erratic rainfall expected and areas of net drying
•
Soil moisture is still rated favorably in many Midwestern areas, but not in Missouri, parts of Kansas, portions of Indiana and a few other areas
•
U.S. Delta crop areas are too dry in the north
•
U.S. west-central and southern Plains are still in a serious drought with little change likely
•
Hot weather and limited rain will impact the central and southern Great Plains over the next two weeks with the hottest conditions coming later this week and during most of next week with daily highs over 100 degrees Fahrenheit
•
Western U.S. Corn Belt will be most at risk of expanding heat and dryness next week with Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, southwestern Iowa and South Dakota expecting hot temperatures and little to no rain
•
Pockets of eastern Midwest dryness will persist over the next couple of weeks, but rain is expected from the eastern Dakotas through southern Minnesota to parts of Ohio and northern Indiana later this week
•
Texas drought will continue serious for cotton, corn and sorghum areas through the end of this month
•
Argentina wheat areas may get a few showers later this week, but drought busting rain is not expected
•
Western Europe will continue dry for ten days and temperatures will rise above normal stressing all crops and livestock, but especially unirrigated coarse grain and oilseed crops
•
Favorable weather is expected in most other areas
Source:
World Weather INC
Wednesday,
July 13:
- China’s
first batch of June trade data, incl. soybean, edible oil, rubber and meat imports - EIA
weekly U.S. ethanol inventories, production, 10:30am - France
AgriMer monthly grains outlook - New
Zealand food prices - HOLIDAY:
Thailand
Thursday,
July 14:
- USDA
weekly net-export sales for corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, pork and beef, 8:30am - HOLIDAY:
France
Friday,
July 15:
- ICE
Futures Europe weekly commitments of traders report - CFTC
commitments of traders weekly report on positions for various U.S. futures and options, 3:30pm - China’s
1H pork output and hog inventory - Malaysia’s
July 1-15 palm oil export data - FranceAgriMer
weekly update on crop conditions - The
Cocoa Association of Asia releases 2Q cocoa grind data
Source:
Bloomberg and FI
Macros
96
Counterparties Take $2.146 Tln At Fed Reverse Repo Op (prev $2.164 Tln, 96 Bids)
IMF
Cuts US 2022 GDP Growth Forecast To 2.3% VS June Est. 2.9%
Raises
2022 US Jobless-Rate Est. To 3.7% VS 3.2% In June
Cuts
US GDP, Raises Jobless Forecasts On Inflation Risks
·
CBOT corn trended lower ahead of the USDA report and dropped thereafter after US producers realized we are in for a large crop. I except state yields to exceed USDA next month.
·
In this month’s China S&D update, the ministry made no changes to last month’s estimates on corn production, consumption or imports.
·
With US demand decreasing, look for prices to trend lower for the remainder of the summer.
·
South Korea’s MFG bought 68,000 tons of corn at $3333.75/ton c&f from either South Africa or South America for arrival around November 14.
Bloomberg
est.
September
corn is seen in a $5.50 and $7.50 range
December
corn is seen in a wide $5.00-$8.00 range