PODCAST · society
Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark
by Inception Point Ai
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vane... This is your Soybeans Commidity Tracker podcast. For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vane...https://www.quietplease.ai Or check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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Midwest Rain Delays and China Demand Shifts Stir Soybean Rally Past 1200 Cents
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. I'm your go-to host for all the latest on soybean markets, prices, and what it means for farmers and traders like you.Let's dive right into today's key numbers. Soybean futures are showing solid strength, with the current S1 futures price sitting at 1188 cents per bushel, according to Global Trade Review. July contracts closed around 1203 cents, September at 1177 cents, and November at 1183 cents per Helena Agri's market report. Cash bids in Illinois from Gateway FS are ranging from about 1072 to 1140 cents per bushel across locations like Marion and Evansville, with April deliveries around 1109 to 1140 cents. That's up nicely from March averages of 1110 cents reported by the USDA.News-wise, soybeans rounded out last week strong, gaining up to 12 and three-quarter cents on Friday per Barchart, with May up 24 cents weekly and November up 27 cents from Helena Agri. But USDA data shows mixed export signals: net sales dropped 29 percent to 258,100 metric tons, with weekly exports down 21 percent to 610,600 tons, led by China, Egypt, and Indonesia. Demand is cooling a bit after earlier peaks, while corn surges ahead.Weather's a factor too—wet, cold Midwest planting delays persist, but a warmup is coming, per DTN Progressive Farmer. Technicals from StoneX look bullish, targeting 1212 cents. Keep an eye on global supply chains; the US and Brazil dominate exports to big buyer China.Actionable tip: If you're holding, these gains suggest scaling out rallies high, as markets climb despite energy dips. Stay nimble with basis flat to lower.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Midwest Beans Hit Seven-Week High as Export Sales Dip and Crush Margins Shift with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, futures, and what it all means for farmers and traders.Right now, the May 2026 soybean futures on the Chicago Board of Trade are hovering around eleven dollars and eighty-two cents per bushel, after closing up nine and a quarter cents on Wednesday but showing mixed action on Thursday. Barchart reports the national average cash bean price dipped just a touch to eleven dollars twenty-three and a quarter cents, while soymeal futures eased to about five dollars seventy cents, but soybean oil futures rallied strong, up forty-two points to one hundred five. Producer.com notes Thursday's CBOT session was rangebound and mixed for soybeans, pressured by falling crude oil prices but lifted by soyoil trends higher.Export sales came in light at two hundred fifty-eight thousand metric tons for the week, below expectations according to Pro Farmer, down twenty-nine percent from last week. That's got July contracts struggling near that key twelve-dollar mark, poking above overnight before modest pullbacks. DTN Progressive Farmer highlights the national soybean basis strengthened two cents to seventy-four cents under July futures on Wednesday. Hellenic Shipping News points to geopolitical tensions boosting biofuel demand, pushing prices to a seven-week high around eleven dollars eighty cents per bushel.Planting progress looks good in the Midwest, though storms might slow things, and global supply signals are mixing in. Keep an eye on soyoil strength versus meal weakness for crush margins.Actionable tip: If you're holding old crop, watch export data closely and consider basis strength for local sales. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update.Thanks for listening, friends. Subscribe, rate us, and tune in next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybean Oil Boom Fuels Local Futures Rally as Planting Races Ahead of Historic Pace
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest soybean market updates to keep you ahead of the curve on prices, trends, and what it all means for your farm or investments.First up, the current trading prices as of late yesterday. May 2026 soybeans closed at eleven dollars and eighty-two cents per bushel, up nine and a quarter cents, hitting a seven-week high around eleven dollars eighty. July 2026 futures are pushing strong too, with four to five cent gains in early trading, and national average cash beans sitting at eleven dollars twenty-five, up ten cents according to Barchart and National Hog Farmer reports. Later contracts like August are at ten thirteen and November at ten fifty-seven and a half. Keep an eye on that five PM EDT close today—prediction models from Octagon AI see a ninety-seven percent shot at topping ten sixty-six cents, driven by biofuel demand.What's fueling this rally? Soybean oil is surging to record highs, boosted by the US EPA's 2026 Renewable Volume Obligations at twenty-two point three three billion gallons, with biomass-based diesel at two point eight two billion— that's four to five billion extra pounds of soybean oil needed for renewable diesel. Crush margins held steady at three dollars sixty-seven per bushel. Planting's off to a fast start too—soybeans at twenty-three percent complete nationwide per the latest USDA report, way ahead of the five-year average, especially in the South. But higher US acreage at eighty-seven point five million and Brazil's record harvest add supply pressure, while China's pig herd dips five percent.Geopolitical tensions and energy costs are keeping things volatile, with EU GMO issues on some South American shipments. Upcoming USDA export sales could show two hundred thousand to six hundred thousand metric tons for this marketing year.There you have it—bullish momentum but watch supply and demand shifts. Tune your strategies accordingly, and thanks for listening, friends. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Beans Surge Ahead: Early Planting, Export Puzzles, and Brazil's Big Harvest Shape Local Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, planting progress, and what's shaking up the markets.As of this morning on April 29th, Chicago soybean futures are feeling a bit of modest weakness, trading fractionally to 2 cents per bushel lower across most contracts. The May '26 contract is sitting around $11.70 per bushel, down about 6 and a half cents, while July '26 is at roughly $11.87, off 4 and three-quarters cents, and November new crop is near $11.64, down just a cent and a half. Cash bean prices are hovering at about $11.10 per bushel nationally, according to cmdtyView data. Soymeal is edging up slightly by a dollar or two per ton, but soyoil is dipping, keeping beans stuck in this sideways range.Planting is roaring ahead in the US—USDA reports 23% of soybeans are in the ground as of April 26th, way ahead of the 12% average, with 8% emerged versus just 1% typically. States like Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio are crushing it, though Iowa's a tad behind. Analysts expect US soybean acreage to bump up 1 to 2 million acres this year as farmers switch from corn due to sky-high fertilizer costs—yields projected around 52 bushels per acre.Exports are mixed: last week's shipments hit 628,000 tonnes, down from prior but 37% above last year, though total marketing year volume lags 24% behind. Brazil's harvest is wrapping up strong at 179 million metric tonnes, but dry weather there could trim second-crop yields. Eyes are on next month's US-China trade summit and ongoing global tensions like the Strait of Hormuz issues boosting energy prices.Traders, keep watching that 1160 support on July beans and 1200 resistance—sideways chop likely continues. Smart move: track your local basis and lock in sales if prices tick toward the top of this range.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybeans Surge 16 Cents as Crude Oil Lifts Ag Markets and Money Managers Hold Their Ground
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and boy do we have some exciting movement in the soybean market to talk about today.If you've been following along with us, you know that agricultural markets have been seeing some real broad strength lately, and soybeans are definitely leading the charge. Just yesterday on April 27th, soybean futures climbed 16 cents, closing at 11 dollars and 94 and a half cents per bushel. That's some serious upward momentum, folks. May soybeans pushed up to 11 dollars and 79 and a half cents, while November soybeans also gained ground at 11 dollars and 56 cents.So what's driving all this strength? Well, higher crude oil prices are playing a big role here. We're also seeing continued support from money managers who are maintaining their long positions in both futures and options. That's trader speak for people betting on prices going higher, and they're sticking with that bet.Now here's something really important to watch. Planting progress for soybeans is currently sitting at just 12 percent, which is actually a little bit ahead of where we were last year at this time. That's moving along pretty steady, which is good news for the overall crop outlook.One thing to keep an eye on is that options activity is migrating from May contracts over to July and November following Friday's expiration. This is pretty typical market behavior, but it does mean we might see some different trading patterns as we move forward.Looking at the broader picture, soybean oil is trading at 28.2 percent and meal at 23.3 percent, so there's strength across the entire complex. The market has been holding in a five week sideways pattern but trending toward the higher end of that range, which is definitely bullish for producers.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and tune in next time for the latest commodity updates and market analysis. This is Vanessa Clark, and we'll catch you tomorrow.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybeans Ride the Oil Wave: Export Gains and Midwest Planting Push Prices Higher
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean prices, trading action, and what it all means for you.As of this morning, the most active CBOT soybean futures contract is trading up at $11.81 three-quarters per bushel, marking a 0.28 percent gain and the third straight session of increases. That's according to the latest from Reuters and Mysteel reports. Soybean futures closed Friday steady to four cents higher, with nearby contracts showing modest strength despite May settling the week down three and a half cents overall. Cash bids are holding firm too, like Gateway FS listing number two yellow soybeans around $10.83 to $11.73 per bushel.What's driving this? Spillover from surging crude oil prices, up nearly two percent to over $107 a barrel for Brent, as US-Iran peace talks stall and the Strait of Hormuz stays choked. Soybeans, key for biofuels, are riding that energy wave. Strong US export demand keeps rolling, with Thursday sales on pace for USDA projections, and traders eye a potential Trump-Xi meeting mid-May for more Chinese buys.Planting's ahead of schedule despite Midwest storms, Argentina's corn harvest is cruising, and drought's easing in our western corn belt. Keep an eye on Price and Roll day tomorrow.Actionable tip: If you've got unpriced contracts, call your broker today. Stay tuned to these oil geopolitics and export flows-they're your price signals.Thanks for joining me on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Subscribe, tune in next time for more updates, and have a great day!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybeans Slide as Brazil Floods Markets and China Waits on Trump-Xi Summit
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean markets, straight from the CBOT and global headlines.Right now, as of this morning, May 2026 CBOT soybeans are trading around 11.65 to 11.70 dollars per bushel, down about 4 to 10 cents from yesterday's close. That's after a late slide on Wednesday, where prices tested five-week highs early but got rejected on fading rumors of big Chinese buying and some farmer selling at those peaks. Grainsprices.com reports the May contract at 11.70 midday Wednesday, while market updates from Grain Markets and Other Stuff confirm the settle near 11.65.What's driving this? Brazilian supply is flooding the market, with April exports estimated at a massive 16.4 million metric tons by ANEC, keeping pressure on US beans. USDA export sales for the week ending April 16 came in at 364,600 tonnes, smack in the middle of expectations but nothing to spark a rally. Chinese buyers seem cautious ahead of that May Trump-Xi summit, and COFCO's huge Brazil crushing expansion signals they're diversifying away from us long-term.Geopolitics is adding fuel to the fire too. The Strait of Hormuz closure from the US-Israeli Iran conflict is spiking fertilizer costs worldwide, per Democracy Now, which could mean higher input expenses for growers. Wet Midwest weather is delaying planting, and soymeal is slumping, dragging beans lower. Soyoil is volatile but uptrending slightly.For you farmers and traders, here's your takeaway: If you're eyeing new-crop sales, November 2026 futures are hovering near 11.50 bucks, a solid 75 cents above recent lows according to Farm Progress. Watch for any China breakout or weather shifts, but Brazilian dominance looks set to cap upside for now.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Hit subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and we'll catch you next time for more updates!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Bean Oil Rally Sparks Price Gains Despite Mixed Signals and Brazilian Harvest Pressure
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean futures, trading action, and what it all means for your market watch.Right now, soybeans are seeing mixed signals in the front months. According to Barchart, they closed with 4 to 5 cent losses on Wednesday midday, while the cmdtyView national average cash bean price dipped 4 and a quarter cents. But hold on, TradingView reports prices extending gains by 1 to 4 cents so far on Wednesday, fueled by a rally in bean oil futures that climbed 6 and three-quarters to 9 points higher on Tuesday. Front-month futures have been volatile, with Monday showing 5 to 6 cent drops and cash beans at 9 dollars and 92 and a quarter cents.On the demand side, StoneX highlights how soybean prices surged around 13 percent in the first quarter of 2026, bucking strong global supply thanks to booming biofuel demand and solid crushing margins. Export inspections are holding strong too, Barchart notes 1.324 million metric tons shipped last week ending January 22, down just 1.54 percent from prior but up 79 percent year over year, with China leading at nearly 900,000 tons. Marketing year totals hit 20.67 million metric tons, a 37.5 percent jump. Sales are lagging a bit at 77 percent of USDA targets, but Brazil's harvest is progressing at 4.9 percent, ahead of last year.Key takeaway: Watch biofuel trends and oil futures for upside potential amid this chop. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update, and as always, thanks for listening. Subscribe, share with fellow traders, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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May Beans Push Past 1174 as Soyoil Surge and Early Planting Shift Market Momentum
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest updates on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for farmers and traders like you.First up, the current trading snapshot. Front-month soybean futures on the CBOT for May 2026 are sitting at about 1174.75 cents per bushel, up roughly 0.77 percent from yesterday. That's according to Farmbucks grain prices, showing steady gains as we kick off the week. Cash bids for number two yellow soybeans are around 22.78 dollars per bushel for April delivery, with some top bids hitting 22.86. Keep an eye on those futures, folks, as they're testing recent highs near 1180 cents.What's driving this? Soybean oil is on fire, surging to multi-year highs and pulling the whole complex higher, as Pro Farmer and AgWeb report. Total Farm Marketing notes May soybeans closed up at 1171.5 cents on Monday, with new crop futures pushing the upper range of their consolidation. Export inspections hit 27.5 million bushels last week, mostly to China, though cumulative totals are down 25 percent year-over-year.On the global front, Brazil's harvest is nearly wrapped at 92 percent complete per AgRural, while US planting is ahead at 12 percent done, beating the five-year average. But watch China, projecting a 6.1 percent drop in soybean imports for 2026, which could add pressure. Geopolitical tensions are boosting oil demand, lifting soyoil and biodiesel needs too.Actionable tip: If you're holding contracts, those moving averages around 1182 cents for July offer resistance, with support at 1180. Stay nimble with weather and upcoming USDA reports.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Stuck in the Rows: May Trade Talks and Planting Progress Could Break Soybean Sideways Action
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, trading action, and what it all means for farmers and traders like you.Right now, as markets kick off the week, July CBOT soybeans are sitting at about 1181 three-quarters cents per bushel, down a touch from Friday, while the key new crop November contract is holding steady to slightly higher around 1157 cents. Front-month May futures are hovering near 1167 cents, with the national cash bean average at roughly 1103 three-quarters, showing just fractional moves. Soybeans are stuck in a tight sideways range, mixed on the session as old crop dips a bit but new crop edges up—classic choppy trading with no big breakout yet.Total Farm Marketing's midday update notes soybeans are confined to that narrow band, eyes on the upcoming US-China trade meeting in mid-May for fresh direction. Planting weather looks to improve after weekend rains, with early estimates at 13 to 15 percent of the US crop in the ground. Keep an eye on the USDA Crop Progress report out this afternoon—that could shake things up. Export inspections are solid, with over 748 thousand metric tons shipped last week, led by China, though year-to-date we're still behind last year.Funds have been net sellers lately, dumping soybean contracts amid broader grain selling, per the CFTC data. Globally, Brazil's harvest is wrapping up strong at around 92 percent done, with estimates pushing 178 million metric tons. Fertilizer drama continues too—US imports like urea are getting rerouted overseas on high global prices, squeezing domestic supplies thanks to Middle East tensions.For you listening, tip of the day: Watch that USDA report closely and lock in some new crop sales if you're sitting on basis strength. Stay nimble in this range—volatility could pop with trade news.Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybean Rally Brews as Strait Tensions and Wet Weather Stir Up Midwest Planting Delays
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the freshest updates on soybean prices, market moves, and key news shaping this volatile commodity.Right now, soybean futures are showing solid gains after a relief rally reversal tied to Strait tensions sparking fresh swings across ag markets. According to Helena Agri's latest market report, May soybeans closed at eleven dollars sixty-seven cents per bushel, up three and a half to half a cent. July hit eleven dollars eighty-three cents, September eleven dollars fifty-two cents, and November eleven dollars fifty-seven cents. Cash bids are holding strong too, like eleven dollars forty-five cents at Fairmont from CHS River Terminals. That's a nice bump, with DTN noting May contracts up one and a half cents as of late last night.What's driving this? Wetter, cooler conditions in the northern Corn Belt are slowing planting, adding support amid Iran uncertainties and Strait closures. Funds remain long over a billion bushels each on corn and beans, so watch for more volatility if weather dries or tensions ease. Helena Agri advises holding sales targets for now, with twenty twenty-six crop on hold at averages like eleven dollars oh-one for fifty-five percent sold.On the news front, USDA bumped the twenty twenty-five twenty-six season average price to ten dollars thirty cents per bushel, up a dime, with ending stocks steady at three hundred fifty million bushels. U.S. Soy just welcomed fourteen million dollars in new USDA trade funding to boost global exports. Globally, spot prices hover around six thousand seven hundred sixty-three per tonne, down twelve percent year-over-year, making feed favorable for poultry farmers. And in the Philippines, soybean meal imports are set to tick up due to surging feed demand.Key takeaway: With support levels like eleven dollars sixty-three and three-quarters for May, per TradingView, stay nimble, sell rallies if they come, and eye planting weather closely. Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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125
Soybeans Caught in the Squeeze: Export Sales Stumble as Crush Demand and Planting Race Ahead
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, export sales, and what it all means for the market.As of midday yesterday on April 16th, soybean futures were trading mixed. May soybeans sat at about $11.64 three-quarters, down a couple cents, while November beans were up two-and-a-half cents to $11.57, according to Total Farm Marketing's midday update. Closing the day, May '26 soybeans finished at $11.63 three-quarters, down three-and-a-quarter cents, with nearby cash beans at $10.98, per Barchart and Brownfield Ag News. That's after a strong March crush report from NOPA at 226 million bushels, boosting soybean oil to multi-year highs near 69 cents, thanks to biofuel demand and higher energy prices.Export sales for the week ending April 9th came in low at 247,900 metric tons for the 2025-26 year—a marketing year low and at the bottom of expectations, as reported by USDA data across sources like Total Farm Marketing and Barchart. Egypt led buyers with 58,100 tons, followed by Costa Rica. Soybean meal sales hit 255,722 tons, missing higher estimates, while oil was minimal. Brazil's production holds steady at 177.85 million metric tons, with exports bumped up.Planting's off to a fast start nationwide at 6% done, way ahead of last year. Geopolitical tensions and crude oil strength are propping up oil-linked demand, but watch for weather and China's signals.Key takeaway: Prices are consolidating sideways between $11.50 and $11.70 for May beans—great for hedging if you're holding old crop. Stay tuned to export reports and planting progress for the next moves.Thanks for joining me on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Subscribe, tune in next time for more updates, and have a great day!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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May Beans Slide as Record Planting Pace Meets Strong Crush Demand and Trade Summit Hopes
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest soybean market news, planting updates, and those key trading prices you need to kick off your day.First up, the current trading snapshot from the Chicago Board of Trade. As of the latest close, May 2026 soybeans are sitting at 1067.75 cents per bushel, down 2.5 cents on the day, with November 2026 at 1066.5 cents, off just a quarter cent. Front-month August is at 998.75 cents, down 5.5 cents. Soybean meal for May 2026 is at 296.2 dollars per ton, down 1.5, while soybean oil is at 55.47 cents per pound, down 0.33. These prices reflect some midday pullback after a strong Wednesday rally, where May beans hit 11.67 dollars, up 9 cents, fueled by a supportive USDA crush report and optimism around the upcoming Beijing summit between U.S. and Chinese leaders.Planting is off to a record-breaking start nationwide, with 6 percent complete as of April 12, tripling the five-year average of 2 percent, according to the latest USDA Crop Progress report and Advance Trading's update. Southern states like Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana are way ahead, thanks to favorable weather trends. But heads up, Brian Basting from Advance Trading warns of historical volatility ahead, with November futures hovering near 11.45 a bushel mid-week, and big swings possible through harvest.The April WASDE report kept U.S. 2025-26 soybean ending stocks steady, but global stocks ticked lower slightly, boosting crush demand for biofuels amid rising energy costs. Domestic crush margins hit a 3.5-year high at 3.12 bucks per bushel, with USDA shifting demand from exports to crushing. National average cash soybeans strengthened to 11.01 dollars, up 9 cents.What does this mean for you? That fast planting pace could pressure raw bean prices short-term, but strong crush and trade talks offer upside potential. Keep an eye on weather and exports for your next moves.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Hit subscribe, share with your farming crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Brazil's Bumper Crop and China's Import Squeeze: What It Means for Your Soybean Bottom Line Today
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today, we're diving into the freshest soybean market news, straight from the CBOT and global updates to keep you ahead of the curve on soybean futures trading and prices.First up, the current trading price: As of midday Tuesday, April 14th, May '26 CBOT soybeans are hovering around $11.58 to $11.65 per bushel, after closing Monday at $11.62 and 1/4, down 13 and a half cents. Cash beans are at about $10.91 to $10.95, showing some choppy action with early gains fading into losses. That's the snapshot for soybean prices right now—range-bound but worth watching closely.Big news from Brazil: Conab upgraded their 2025/26 soybean crop to a record 179.15 million metric tons, up 1.3 million from last month, with harvest now 87% complete. That's adding supply pressure, keeping things bearish. Meanwhile, US planting is zooming ahead at 6%, way above the 2% average, which spooked traders yesterday.China's March soybean imports hit 4.02 million metric tons, up 14.9% year-over-year but missing expectations of 6.4 million due to strict inspections on Brazilian shipments for pests and damage. Expect bigger arrivals ahead, over 10 million tons monthly through June.Key ahead: Wednesday's NOPA crush report eyes a record 229.978 million bushels, which could boost demand if it confirms strong US processing. Export inspections were solid at 814,000 metric tons last week, led by China.For traders and farmers, tip: With prices stuck below $12, eye that NOPA data and Brazil harvest wrap-up for breakout signals. Stay nimble on soybean futures.Thanks for tuning in, friends—hit subscribe, share with your ag crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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Soybeans Slip: Outside Day Signals Weakness as May Contracts Test 20-Day Range
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, fresh off Monday's close, so you can stay ahead in this fast-moving market.Soybeans took a dip on Monday, closing with losses of 5 to 13 and three-quarter cents, easing lower as the session wrapped up. Front-month contracts are now trading down 8 to 9 cents, while new crop futures are off 3 to 5 cents. The cmdtyView national average cash bean price settled at 10 dollars and 95 and three-quarter cents, down 13 and a half cents from the prior day. Soymeal futures edged mixed, up a dime in spots but down as much as 1 dollar 60 overall, and soy oil felt the pressure too.May soybeans have been stuck in a sideways range for nearly 20 days, bouncing between 11 dollars 45 and 11 dollars 80 cents, but Monday marked an outside day lower, signaling potential weakness. Traders are refocusing on global tensions like war risks and weather patterns that could shake things up for corn and soybeans alike. Keep an eye on the dollar index at 98.41, down a bit, and related contracts like July lean hogs at 66 dollars 50 and meal at 328 dollars 90.If you're planting, trading, or just watching the ag sector, this pullback might be a buying dip or a sign to hedge. Check your local basis and stay tuned to weather updates from South America—they're key for supply forecasts.That's your soybean snapshot for today, friends. Thanks for tuning in—hit subscribe, share with your network, and I'll catch you next time on the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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121
Soybeans Surge: China's Protein Crunch Meets Midwest's Tariff Tangle with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean prices, trends, and what it all means for farmers and markets worldwide.Right now, soybean futures are hitting a four-week high at around 1180 US cents per bushel, or about 11.80 dollars per bushel. That's up double digits today, with the May contract settling strong amid a surge in Brazilian meal demand and solid biofuel interest. TradingView reports this as the peak since early March, fueled by USDA updates and steady global buying.In China, the big story continues: domestic soybean prices have bucked tradition, rising over 25 percent since mid-March after a stage high, and still 16 percent above October levels as of early April. SunSirs analysts point to a structural shortage of high-protein beans, despite bumper crops overall. Imports hit a record 118 million tons in 2025, but early 2026 arrivals dipped before Brazilian shipments ramp up. Experts like Hou Xueli from Guo Da Futures say expect more upside from tight grassroots supplies, farmer holdbacks, and rising corn costs.Globally, supplies look loose at 427 million tons for 2025-26, but US Midwest farmers face headwinds. WSLS notes ongoing pressure from 2025 tariffs, the Iran war spiking fertilizer and fuel costs via Strait of Hormuz disruptions, and Brazil's dominance flooding the market. A recent ceasefire offers hope, but planting season ramps up with funds watching Iran tensions, weather, and China buys.Key takeaway: Hedge smart with futures to lock in gains, as analysts predict medium-term highs from geopolitics and low ending stocks. Stay tuned for tomorrow's update.Thanks for joining me on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with your farming friends, and tune in next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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120
Meal Rally Shakes Up the Complex as Spreaders Reposition and Kansas City Bids Push Higher
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and boy do we have some interesting movement in the soybean market to talk about today.Let's jump right into the numbers. According to the latest cash bids, soybeans are trading in a pretty solid range right now. We're seeing prices hovering around ten dollars and ninety-seven cents per bushel on the national average, with some regional variation depending on where you're looking. If you're in Kansas City, truck bids are showing soybeans between eleven fifty-six and eleven seventy-five per bushel, while here in Illinois through Gateway FS, we're looking at a range from about ten dollars and sixty-one cents up to eleven dollars and forty cents depending on your delivery month and location.Now here's where things get really interesting. The soybean meal market absolutely rallied overnight. May soybean meal jumped five dollars and fifty cents and hit a two-week high. Traders are starting to unwind their long bean oil and short meal spreads, which is creating some really bullish technical signals. May soybean meal is actually poised for a technically bullish weekly close, and we're seeing a really nice upside price breakout from its recent sideways trading range.Bean oil did pull back a bit, down sixty points, but the overall soybean complex is showing some real strength here. What's driving this? Well, there's been some follow-through buying and spreaders repositioning their portfolios, which is creating some really positive momentum.For those of you managing new crop soybeans, keep in mind that many elevators are offering delayed pricing programs. CHS Farmers Alliance, for example, is offering nine cents per bushel per month on new crop soybeans with the first ten days allowed for pricing.We're also watching international factors pretty closely. China has been resuming soybean purchases, which is providing some nice underlying support to the market. Traders are keeping a close eye on weather conditions in Brazil and Argentina as the South American growing season kicks off, since that's going to have a big impact on global soybean supplies.So there you have it, folks. Solid prices, bullish signals in the meal complex, and some real momentum building in the soybean market. Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us next time for more market insights. This is Vanessa Clark, and we'll see you tomorrow.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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119
Soybeans Steady as WASDE Day Arrives and Brazil Barrels Toward Harvest Finish
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest soybeans news, futures action, and cash bids to keep you ahead of the curve on this key commodity.Right now, as markets open this Thursday morning, May soybean futures are hovering around 11.62 dollars per bushel, up a slight three-quarters of a cent from yesterday's close, according to Trading Economics data. That's after a modest gain yesterday despite big pressure from plunging soybean oil prices, which dropped over two cents on news of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire easing tensions in the Strait of Hormuz. November soybeans settled at 11.52 dollars, while cash bids are ranging from 11.20 to 11.75 dollars per bushel across spots like St. Joseph and Kansas City, per daily grain reports from 680 KFEQ.Big headlines include the USDA's WASDE report dropping today, with analysts expecting U.S. ending stocks steady at about 349 million bushels. Brazil's harvest is wrapping up strong at over 80 percent complete, exporting 14.5 million tons in March, though slightly off last year. Eyes are on China too—President Trump's upcoming May talks with Xi could boost U.S. exports if trade flows improve. Geopolitics still looms, with crude oil down sharply to 95 dollars a barrel, but a weaker U.S. dollar is making our beans more competitive against Brazil.For traders and growers, watch for volatility around today's export sales data and WASDE tweaks—history shows these reports can swing prices 40 cents or more. Tip of the day: If you're holding contracts, consider basis levels holding steady amid falling Gulf bids; lock in now if you're eyeing May delivery.That's your soybeans update—stay tuned to these swings. Thanks for listening, friends—subscribe, share, and tune in next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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118
Beans Under Pressure: Export Lag and China's Feed Shift Squeeze US Soybean Markets
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean prices, exports, and what it all means for your farm or trading decisions.Right now, as of this early morning check, May 2026 soybean futures are hovering around eleven dollars and fifty-eight cents per bushel, down about eight and a half cents from yesterday's close according to reports from Zaner Group and Delong Company. November contracts are sitting near eleven dollars and fifty-one cents, reflecting some ongoing pressure. The national average cash bean price is about ten dollars and eighty-nine cents, per Barchart data.Big story this week: US soybean exports are lagging badly, with the latest USDA inspections showing just seven hundred seventy-nine thousand metric tons shipped for the week ending April second, four point six percent below last year, and year-to-date totals twenty-six percent behind, as detailed in GrainsPrices. China took nearly five hundred thousand tons but their push to swap out imported soymeal for cheaper local feeds like fermented brans and pumpkin vines is a real long-term drag, backed by Beijing's policies amid trade tensions.Meanwhile, Brazil's harvest is eighty-two percent done per AgRural, slower than last year but still flooding the market with supply. Funds and technical selling added to yesterday's dip, decoupling a bit from rising crude oil amid Middle East headlines. Keep an eye on tomorrow's USDA WASDE report, expected to show minimal US changes but possible tweaks to global demand.Actionable tip: If you're holding contracts, watch that eleven dollars fifty support level on November beans, and consider hedging if exports don't pick up with any Trump-Xi talks. Stay nimble out there.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and we'll catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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117
Vanessa Clark Unpacks Export Wins and War Premiums Shaking Your Soybean Wallet
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the freshest soybean market news, prices, and what it all means for you.First up, the current trading prices. According to Farm Progress, the May 2026 soybean futures contract closed at 1067.75 cents per bushel, down 2.5 cents from the previous session, with a daily range of 1063.75 to 1073.75. July 2026 is at 1078.25, also down 2 cents. Pro Farmer reports soybeans trading mostly a penny to 2 cents higher midmorning on April 6, supported by stronger-than-expected export inspections of 779,352 metric tons for the week ended April 2, beating analyst estimates. Total Farm Marketing notes May soybeans up 3.25 cents to 11.66-3/4 dollars per bushel, rangebound between 11.50 and 11.80 lately.What's driving this? Export demand is solid, especially to China and Mexico, though slower year-over-year. Geopolitical tensions, like U.S.-Iran escalations pushing crude oil higher, are spilling over into soybeans and soyoil. GFO mentions the postponed Trump-Xi meeting rescheduled for May, which trading algorithms are watching closely for potential U.S. soybean buying from China. Brownfield Ag News highlights crush margins staying strong at record levels, favoring more soybean acres, with Southern states like Arkansas and Mississippi projected to boost planting by 10% in 2026.Keep an eye on Thursday's USDA supply and demand report and Brazil's weather—rain is helping, but deficits linger. For traders and farmers, this means watching war premiums and export paces closely; prices could firm up on demand but face downside if planting goes smooth.That's your soybean update—stay tuned to these trends, and remember to hedge smart. Thanks for listening, friends—subscribe, share, and tune in next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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116
Soybeans Slip as Brazil Steals Market Share and Farmers Watch China Trade Talks
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for farmers and traders like you.Right now, the May 2026 soybean futures are trading at 1162.75 cents per bushel, down about 0.49% or 5.75 cents on the day, according to Farmbucks and Walsh Grain data. That's hovering around 11.63 bucks a bushel, slipping further after hitting a four-week low near 1150 cents, as Trading Economics reports. Over the past four weeks, we've seen a modest 0.91% gain, and a solid 12.2% rise over the last year, but short-term pressure is mounting.Weak U.S. export sales are the big story—USDA data shows sales for the 2025/26 season dropped to 353,300 tons last week, down 18% from the prior average. South American competition, especially cheaper Brazilian beans, is dominating global trade and squeezing U.S. supplies. Analysts at TradingView note the May contract could retest support at 11.58, potentially sliding to 11.48 if it breaks.On a brighter note, higher crude oil prices—up over two bucks amid U.S.-Iran tensions—are boosting biofuel demand for soybean oil, which jumped 2.82% to 69 cents. Speculators are piling in too, with large bets on soybeans hitting 227,846 contracts, up 12,636 from last week per Investmacro. Plus, recent USDA reports flagged lower inventories and more soybean acres at 84.7 million, up 4% from Agweb.Trade talks with China, our top buyer, are in focus—any positive news could spark a rebound. Farmers, if you're holding bins like South Dakota's Jeff Thompson, hang tight; volatility from politics and war news is real, but basis bids are steady in spots.That's your soybean update—stay nimble, watch exports and oil. Thanks for tuning in, friends—subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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115
Soybeans Sink Despite Oil Surge: Iran Tensions, China Boycotts, and a Record U.S. Crush
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hey everyone, welcome to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for farmers and traders.First up, the current trading snapshot as of yesterday's close on April 2nd. May 2026 soybeans settled at $11.6275 per bushel, down 5.75 cents from the previous session, with a high of $11.7425 and low of $11.62. November contracts closed at $11.5375, off just 1.75 cents. Cash soybeans are hovering around $11.36, down 2 cents, while the national average cash bean price sits at about $10.97 to $11.00. Soybean meal for May ended at $315.20, down $3, but bean oil rallied to $69.00, up nearly 2 cents.Soybeans couldn't catch the crude oil surge yesterday, despite oil jumping over $10 a barrel on President Trump's speech about ongoing strikes on Iran and uncertainty in the Strait of Hormuz. That closure is disrupting 38% of global fertilizer shipments, pushing farmers toward soybeans over nitrogen-heavy corn. U.S. inventories plunged 36% to 2.10 billion bushels per the USDA's March 31 Grain Stocks Report, thanks to a weak 2025 harvest and biofuel demand. But exports disappointed at 353,000 metric tons for the week ending March 26, below expectations, with China still boycotting U.S. beans in favor of Brazil's record 180 million metric ton crop.On a bright note, U.S. crush hit a February record of 214 million bushels, up 13% year-over-year, with strong margins supporting demand for meal and oil. Brazil's massive output means tougher competition ahead, but Purdue economist Joana Colussi says shrinking margins there might slow their expansion.For traders, watch those moving averages: May beans below the 5-day at 11.64. Farmers, with markets closed for Good Friday, use this breather to lock in basis or hedge ahead of planting shifts.That's your soybean update—stay nimble out there. Thanks for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and catch you next time!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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114
Daily Soybeans Price Tracker: USDA's Planted Acreage Surprise Lifts Futures to Two-Week Highs
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Soybeans podcast.Hello and welcome to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker, I'm your host Vanessa Clark, and I'm so glad you're tuning in today. Let's dive right into what's happening in the soybean market and what it means for growers like you.We just wrapped up a really interesting week for soybeans. On Tuesday, the USDA released its Prospective Plantings report, and it sent some positive signals through the market. Farmers are planning to plant 84.7 million acres of soybeans in 2026, which is up from last year and marks the sixth largest planted soybean acreage in U.S. history. What's particularly interesting is that this acreage came in slightly lower than what most traders were expecting, and that's actually bullish news for prices.Here's why that matters. When planted acreage is lower than anticipated, it suggests potentially tighter supplies down the road. Using trend line yield estimates, the USDA is forecasting 2026 soybean production could reach 4.436 billion bushels, which is about 14 million bushels fewer than their previous forecast. That smaller expected crop pushed prices higher.So let's talk about the actual prices you're seeing. As of late Tuesday trading, May 2026 soybean futures settled at 11 dollars and 71 cents per bushel, up about one percent for the day. The new crop November 2026 contract closed at 11 dollars and 57 and a half cents per bushel, up over one percent as well. These were two and a half week highs for the new crop contract.Now here's something important to watch. On Wednesday, soybeans pulled back a bit as traders took some profits following Tuesday's gains. You also saw some spillover pressure from crude oil markets, which weakened on geopolitical developments. The national average cash bean price was hovering around 10 dollars and 95 cents per bushel.The big takeaway here is that the slightly lower acreage forecast is supporting prices, but demand remains the key question. China's purchasing activity and crush demand will be critical to watch in the coming weeks. The USDA's next supply and demand estimates come out April 9th, so mark your calendars.Thanks so much for listening to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and tune in next time for the latest soybean market updates.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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113
Soybeans Soar: Acres Fall Short and Biodiesel Boosts Bulls on the Board of Trade
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with your host Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the hottest soybeans news straight from the USDA's Prospective Plantings report and the latest Chicago Board of Trade action.First up, the current trading price: Chicago soybean futures are pushing higher, with May contracts up about 13 cents to around 1135 cents per bushel as of this afternoon, according to DTN Progressive Farmer updates. Soyoil is leading the charge, rallying toward three-year highs on strong biodiesel demand and higher crude oil prices, while soymeal holds steady. The Producer AM Market Report notes front-month beans opened 1 to 4 cents higher this morning, shrugging off yesterday's late weakness.The big story is USDA's surprise reveal: Farmers plan to plant just 84.7 million acres of soybeans in 2026, down from last year's 81.2 million but way below trader expectations of 85.5 million. That's bullish for prices, folks. Corn acres came in higher at 95.3 million, stealing some spotlight, but soybean stocks as of March 1 hit 2.105 billion bushels, up from last year. OCJ and Farm Progress confirm this lower-than-expected acreage sparked double-digit gains, with soybeans jumping 12 to 19 cents post-report.Export inspections dipped to 586,427 tons last week per Grain Central, but strong U.S. crush demand keeps momentum alive.Actionable takeaway: If you're a farmer or trader, watch for weather risks and biofuel trends these could sustain this rally into spring. Keep an eye on tomorrow's close for breakout signals.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your ag crew, and join me next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker updates. Talk soon.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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112
Soybeans Surge as Farmers Pivot: Your Midwest Market Minute with Vanessa
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the latest on soybean prices, planting trends, and what it all means for you.Right now, US soybeans two-month futures are trading at about eleven dollars and sixty-three cents per bushel, up a bit from yesterday's eleven dollars and fifty-nine cents, according to Katadata. Chicago Board of Trade futures are also edging higher by one to three cents this morning, as reported by the AM Market Report, with May contracts around eleven dollars and fifty-nine cents. Soybean oil is rallying too, boosted by strong biofuel demand and higher energy prices over one hundred dollars a barrel for WTI crude.Big news on planting: Farmers are shifting toward more soybeans for the 2026 season, projecting eighty-five point five million acres, up over five percent from last year. Thats from sources like Farm Progress and Total Farm Marketing. Why? Soybeans use less fertilizer amid rising costs from trade tensions and conflicts, making them a smarter, cheaper choice to stay profitable.In Brazil, Mato Grossos 2025-26 crop looks set for a record thanks to good rains, per Argus Media. But US export inspections dipped this week, says Dow Jones, and global trade uncertainty lingers with China watching closely.Actionable tip: If youre farming or trading, watch Tuesdays USDA reports on acreage and stocks—they could swing prices big time. Consider locking in some sales if youre holding beans, especially with biofuel policies supporting demand.Thats your daily update, folks—stay smart out there. Thanks for listening, hit subscribe, and tune in tomorrow for more. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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111
Soybeans Sprout Green as Biofuel Boom and China Exports Lift May Futures Above $11.75
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, your go-to gal for all things soybeans, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean prices, market moves, and what it means for you.Right now, May 2026 CBOT soybean futures are trading around 11 dollars and 77 cents per bushel, up about 3 to 4 cents from yesterday's close of 11 dollars 73 and three-quarters cents. That's according to early morning updates from AgMarket and Total Farm Marketing. Soybean meal and oil are pushing higher too, with meal at 317 dollars and 50 cents and oil at 67 dollars and 32 cents per reports from Ever.Ag spot summaries.Big headlines today: The Trump administration just finalized historic biofuel blending rules through the EPA's Renewable Fuel Standard, boosting soybean oil demand by over 60 percent compared to last year. American Soybean Association farmers are cheering this as a win for domestic processing and markets. Export sales rocked too, hitting the highest in five weeks at 24.6 million bushels, led by China, Germany, Mexico, Japan, and Taiwan, per Brownfield Ag News and DTN Progressive Farmer.Markets are buzzing ahead of USDA's Prospective Plantings report on March 31st, expecting more soybean acres, maybe 85.5 million, shifting from corn amid trade talks and weather risks. Longer term, FAPRI sees 2026-27 prices averaging 10 dollars 39 cents a bushel.Actionable tip: If you're planting, watch those fertilizer costs from global tensions and lock in some sales now on this upside momentum. Stay nimble, folks.Thanks for tuning in, besties. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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110
Soybeans Surge on Trade Hopes and Biofuel Buzz with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, your go-to gal for all things soybeans, and today we're diving into the freshest news on soybean prices, market moves, and what it means for you.Right now, the CBOT May soybean futures are sitting at about 1178 cents per bushel, up over 6 cents today according to CME Group quotes. Spot market summaries from Ever.ag show soybeans at 1174 cents per bushel, with a nice gain of 3 cents. That's some solid strength, driven by fund buying and technical support, as Brownfield Ag News reports. The national average cash bean price is holding around 1101 cents per bushel, up a bit too from Barchart updates.Big news boosting prices: optimism around biofuel blending mandates from the EPA, expected any day now, and that rescheduled Trump-Xi summit set for mid-May in China, per Total Farm Marketing. Plus, strong US export sales hit over 668 thousand metric tons for the week, way above expectations. Farmers are eyeing bigger soybean plantings too, with surveys pointing to 86 million acres this year from Farm Progress.On the global side, China and Brazil sorted out some shipping hiccups, which could smooth out supply. Keep watching South American harvest progress and upcoming USDA reports.For you at home or on the farm, here's your takeaway: if you're holding soybeans, these trade talks and biofuel buzz might keep prices firm short-term, but stay flexible with hedges. Chat with your advisor and track export sales weekly.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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109
Soybeans Bounce Back: China Demand and Brazil Rain Give US Farmers a Price Boost
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, chatting with you like we're grabbing coffee together about the freshest soybeans news and prices.Today, soybeans are rallying nicely. According to Barchart, they're trading with 6 to 9 cent gains, and the cmdtyView national average cash bean price sits at 10 dollars and 79 cents a quarter. May 26 futures hit 11 dollars 63 cents a quarter, up 8 a quarter cents, while Total Farm Marketing reports May soybeans up 3 a quarter cents at 11 dollars 58 a quarter cents this morning. GX94 Radio notes the close at 11 dollars 71 three quarters for May, up 16 three quarters cents. Brownfield Ag News confirms soybeans moved higher overnight, rebounding from yesterday's dip.Why the bounce? AgWeb says soybeans eased yesterday as China relaxed rules for Brazilian beans, but Producer.com highlights profit-taking after gains, with eyes on a rescheduled US-China meeting per Dow Jones that could spark more buying. Brazil's massive crop faces supply chain snags from rains, logistics, and higher domestic crushing for biodiesel, per Southern Ag Today, creating US export chances. China plans bigger soybean imports at 108 million tonnes next year, says Rural Voice, boosting demand.Actionable tip: If you're holding soybeans, watch Thursday's export sales data, expected 250,000 to 500,000 metric tons, and EPA's biofuel mandates soon. These could push prices higher amid South America planting.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time for more soybeans updates. Stay savvy out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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108
Beans Under Pressure: South American Harvest Weighs on May Contracts
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, early morning trading shows soybeans down 3 to 4 cents across the board. May soybeans are hovering around 11 dollars and 34 cents for support near the 50-day moving average, with resistance up at 12 dollars and 38 cents. Yesterday, May 26 beans closed stronger at about 11 dollars and 63 and a half cents, up a bit thanks to bean oil support and solid export news, according to GrainsPrices.com. But today, were seeing that two-sided trade pull prices lower, as AgMarket.Net reports, with beans finishing weaker by 3 to 9 cents in recent sessions.Big picture, expect a mixed trade ahead. Trade estimates peg US soybean acres at 85 to 86 million this year, plus a record crop from South America flooding the world with supply. Chinas still a key buyer, but Brazils harvest is ramping up fast at over 68 percent complete, keeping pressure on prices. Funds are long the complex, offering some floor, but if they pull back, watch out.Herere your actionable takeaway: If you havent locked in protection on new crop soybeans, these levels look solid for hedging. Keep an eye on next weeks USDA Prospective Plantings report, expected to show more soybean acres versus corn, boosting that price ratio.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your farming buddies, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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107
Soybeans Bounce Back: China Watch and Diesel Demand Could Shift Your Spring Strategy
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today Im diving into the freshest soybeans news, including where prices stand right now, so you can stay ahead of the curve whether youre a farmer, trader, or just watching the markets.First off, the current trading price for May soybean futures is sitting at eleven dollars sixty-seven cents per bushel, up about five to six cents this morning according to AgMarket.Net and Total Farm Marketing updates. November soybeans are at eleven dollars forty-seven cents, also gaining six cents or so. After a rough week with a sixty-four cent drop, especially that limit down selloff last Monday from the delayed Trump-Xi summit amid Middle East tensions, were seeing a modest rebound as markets stabilize.Chinas still showing weak interest in US soybeans, with sales way down, but recent shipments are picking up a bit per MarketTalk Ag reports, even as Brazil dominates with their harvest at sixty-eight percent complete. Funds remain long over two hundred thousand contracts, propping up dips, and talk of higher biomass-based diesel blending targets could boost soybean oil soon. Plus, AgMarket.Net estimates eighty-six million soybean acres this spring, a big jump that might ease supply worries later.For you listening, heres your actionable takeaway: Watch this weeks renewable fuel standards news and USDA export sales reports closely. If China steps up or EPA announces strong blending, it could spark a rally, so consider locking in sales now if youre holding inventory to protect against more volatility from trade talks or global conflicts.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your network, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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106
Soybeans Hold Steady as China Waits and Crude Oil Stirs the Pot
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, what's driving the market, and some smart tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, May soybeans are trading up 2 cents at 11 dollars and 70 and a half cents per bushel, while November is up one and a half cents to 11 dollars 47 and three quarters cents. Total Farm Marketing reports soybean meal dipped a bit to 332 dollars 40 cents, but soybean oil climbed half a cent to 65 dollars 94 cents. That's a modest rebound after some volatility, with prices edging higher on firmer oil demand tied to energy market jitters from Persian Gulf tensions.Export sales were slower last week at 305 thousand tons, down from 466 thousand, mainly to China, Mexico, and unknown spots, per Total Farm Marketing. China's curbing fertilizer exports to shield their farmers, tightening global supplies already squeezed by Strait of Hormuz issues. Meanwhile, bigger US planting plans for 2026 around 85 million acres could pressure prices longer term, according to Commodity Board and farmer surveys.Trade uncertainty looms too, with a delayed Trump Xi summit stalling fresh China buys after a strong February surge of 1 point 45 million tons of US soybeans. Brazil's dominating imports there, adding competition.Here's your takeaway: If you're a farmer or trader, lock in some forward sales now while prices hold above 11 dollars 60 cents, especially with low forward coverage at just 11 percent for next crop. Watch crude oil swings and China news closely, as they could spark quick moves. Diversify with meal exports looking solid short term.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your network, and catch you next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker updates. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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105
Beans Bump Higher: May Futures Rally on Meal Demand and Middle East Oil Tensions
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, May 2026 soybean futures are sitting at about eleven dollars and sixty-eight cents per bushel, up around six cents from yesterday's close, according to the latest from DTN Progressive Farmer and Brownfield Ag News. That's a nice little rally, with beans trading higher this morning on support from soybean meal demand and a rebound in crude oil prices amid tensions in the Middle East. Grain Markets Overview notes the market's eyeing strong export sales potential, though last week's USDA report showed soybean sales at just two hundred ninety-eight thousand tonnes, below expectations.We've got some big-picture shifts too. Don Roose from Brownfield Ag News predicts this soybean rally could pull acres away from corn in 2026 planting, and surveys like Allendale and S&P Global are projecting around eighty-five million soybean acres, up from last year. Brazil's harvest is over fifty-nine percent done but lagging pace, and talks with China on quality issues might tighten supply. Plus, US biofuel demand is growing, with over sixty percent of soybeans now heading to crush rather than exports.For you growers and traders, here's your takeaway: watch those export reports and energy prices closely. If you're holding old crop, consider locking in some gains now while cash basis holds steady at about seventy-five cents under May futures. New crop looks promising with higher acreage bets, so think ahead on your planting plans.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe so you never miss a soybean update, and join me next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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104
Soybeans Slip on China Delays: Brazil Harvest Heats Up as Trade Talks Stall
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market swings, and what it all means for you.Right now, as of this mornings AM Market Report from Producer.com, Chicago soybean futures for the front month are trading down about 2 cents per bushel, sitting around 11.61 for May contracts after closing up 4 and three quarters cents yesterday according to GX94 Radio. We saw a nice bounce on Turnaround Tuesday with most contracts up 9 to 10 cents, thanks to strength in soyoil and crude oil, but old crop beans dipped on fresh trade jitters.Heres the big news shaking things up: President Trump announced hes delaying the US-China trade meeting by five or six weeks, pushing it to mid or late April. That news deflated prices earlier this week after Mondays limit down slide, as traders worry about US soybean exports to China, the worlds top buyer. Pro Farmer notes markets stabilized post-drop, but uncertainty lingers with Irans conflict spiking energy costs too.On the global front, Brazils soybean harvest is 60 percent done per ANEC estimates, with March exports at 16.32 million metric tons, and their prices well below ours. EU imports are down year over year at 8.74 million metric tons through mid March. Watch for the USDA Planting Intentions Report on March 31st, where the soybean to corn ratio might sway planting decisions.For you farmers and traders, heres your takeaway: Keep an eye on China talks and input costs like fertilizer, which are climbing with Middle East tensions. If youre holding contracts, consider hedging on these dips, and diversify watching Brazil and Argentinas crops.Thats your daily soybean scoop, packed with the freshest info to help you stay ahead. Thanks for tuning in, friends – subscribe, share with your crew, and well catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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103
Soybeans Swing Wild: China Summit Delay Shakes Markets as Crush Hits Record High
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today we're diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Soybean futures took a wild ride this week. They plunged limit down yesterday, with May contracts dropping 70 cents to around 11.55 per bushel, sparked by President Trump's comments hinting at delaying his meeting with China's President Xi over Strait of Hormuz tensions. But this morning, they're bouncing back some. Total Farm Marketing reports May soybeans up 9 cents to 11.64 per bushel, and November up 17 cents to 11.38. Export bids firmed up too, according to a USDA AMS MyMarketNews report, with US number one soybeans for current delivery at 12.215 to 12.255 per bushel at Gulf ports. That's a slight gain from yesterday.Other big news: NOPA's February crush hit a record 208 million bushels, up 17 percent from last year, though soybean oil stocks swelled to over 2 billion pounds, the highest since 2020. Export inspections beat expectations at 35 million bushels last week, with China taking the lion's share. Brazil's harvest is rolling at 61 percent complete, but rising freight costs there could shift some demand our way.Actionable tip for you soybean watchers or farmers: Keep an eye on US-China trade talks and South American weather. If that summit delay drags on, prices might stay choppy, but strong exports and crush demand could support a rebound. Consider locking in sales if you're sitting on old crop, or hedge new crop futures around these levels to protect against volatility.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time for more soybean updates. Stay smart out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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102
Soybeans Take a Seventy Cent Tumble as Trump-Xi Summit Hangs in the Balance Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Good evening, I'm Vanessa Clark, and welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Let's dive right into what's happening in the soybean markets today, because it's been quite a roller coaster.May soybean futures closed today at eleven fifty-five and a quarter cents per bushel, marking a significant daily limit down move. We're talking about a seventy cent drop, which puts us near a more than two week low. This is a pretty dramatic shift in the market, and I want to help you understand what's driving these moves.The primary driver today is geopolitical tension. Over the weekend, President Trump threatened to delay his scheduled summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping later this month unless China helps secure the Strait of Hormuz. For those following commodity markets, this is huge because China is the world's largest importer of soybeans, and any uncertainty around US China trade relations sends shivers through the soybean complex.Now here's what's interesting on the positive side. According to recent reports from economic officials, top US and Chinese representatives held remarkably stable talks in Paris just yesterday. These discussions touched on potential areas of agreement in agriculture, which could suggest some optimism ahead of that Beijing summit. Cotton traders actually responded positively to this news, with May cotton futures rising to a four and a half month high.Looking at the broader picture, Brazil is harvesting what appears to be another record soybean crop, with production expected to reach one hundred seventy seven point eight million metric tons. Brazilian exports are projected to potentially reach one hundred fourteen point four million metric tons, which would be a new record if realized.The soybean meal futures fell ten dollars and fifty cents to three hundred twelve dollars and twenty cents, while soybean oil hit its daily limit down, falling three hundred fifty points to sixty three point ninety four cents. Both soybean and soyoil futures will trade with expanded daily price limits tomorrow as traders digest these significant moves.For those in the market, remember that we're in a highly volatile environment right now. The interplay between geopolitical concerns and global supply dynamics means staying informed is more important than ever. Keep watching for developments around that Trump Xi meeting later this month, as resolution either way could significantly impact prices.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Be sure to subscribe and join us next time for the latest updates on soybean prices and market trends. I'm Vanessa Clark, and I'll see you tomorrow.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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101
Soybeans Slip on Oil Wobble While Brazil-China Tensions Brew Under the Surface
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.Right now, May soybean futures are sitting at 12 dollars and 16 cents a bushel, down 11 cents from yesterday according to the TFM Morning Update. November futures are at 11 dollars and 59 cents, off 8 cents. Were seeing some pullback after that huge rally more than 1 dollar 50 cents since mid-January, with soybeans hitting their best levels since 2024 as noted in Grain Markets and Other Stuff podcast. Total Farm Marketing points to weakness in soybean oil tracking lower crude after a US waiver on Russian oil eased supply worries.Big news from Brazil too. Trade groups like Abiove and Anec are worried about exports to China after Cargill halted shipments due to new stricter pest inspections requested by China, per both TFM and Grain Markets reports. That could tighten global supply and support prices longer term. US export sales are picking up, with 466 thousand tons sold last week versus 384 the prior week, says ADM Investor Services. Funds were big buyers too, snapping up 5 thousand soybean contracts.Heres your takeaway: If youre holding soybeans or farming them, watch Brazil-China trade closely and consider locking in some profits on this rally amid oil spikes from Middle East tensions. Domestic crush demand looks strong with biofuel buzz.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time for more soybean updates. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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100
Beans, Oil, and Geopolitics: Why Iran's Conflict Is Moving Your Local Soybean Prices
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. I'm Vanessa Clark, and we're diving into what's been happening in the soybean market today and what it means for you.Let me start with the numbers because that's what you're here for. May soybean futures closed today at twelve dollars and twenty seven cents per bushel, up thirteen and a quarter cents. That's solid movement, and there's a lot driving it.First, the March WASDE report came out yesterday and while it seemed quiet on the surface for whole beans, there's actually a lot brewing underneath. The USDA raised soybean imports and crush estimates by five million bushels each, and that ripple effect has been huge. Soymeal supplies jumped by four hundred thousand short tons, and the USDA increased season average prices for soymeal by five dollars per ton to three hundred dollars per ton. May soymeal futures closed at three hundred twenty dollars and twenty cents, up four dollars and eighty cents.But here's where it gets interesting. We're also seeing a major geopolitical component. The conflict in Iran is creating huge disruptions in global oil markets. Crude oil futures have been soaring, hitting levels we haven't seen since the two thousand twenty two Russian Ukrainian war. When crude oil goes up, it typically lifts the entire edible oils complex, and that includes soybean oil. We're seeing crush margins shift significantly toward the oil side of the equation, which is supporting these soybean gains.Now, the elephant in the room is exports. Export sales have been sluggish, and we're sitting at the second lowest export sales at this point in the marketing year since the two thousand twelve to two thousand thirteen season. Prices have gotten pretty uncompetitive compared to Brazilian offers, but there's hope on the horizon. Trade talks between US and Chinese leaders are happening next month, and there's speculation that China might make substantial additional purchases of US soybeans. That possibility alone is helping prop up prices right now.So what does this mean for you? Keep your eye on three things. Watch crude oil prices because they're directly supporting the market. Monitor those US China trade discussions because big announcements could change everything. And pay attention to export data because the fundamentals really matter long term.Thanks so much for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Make sure you subscribe and join us tomorrow for the latest soybean market updates. This is Vanessa Clark, and I'll see you next time.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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99
Soybeans Surge on War Jitters: May Futures Rally to Two-Year Highs as Farmers Eye Acreage Shifts
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.May soybeans closed at 12 dollars and 14 cents per bushel, up 12 and a quarter cents on the day. Thats according to the closing futures from Brownfield Ag News and ADM Investor Services reports. Soybean meal hit 315 dollars and 40 cents, up 90 cents, while soybean oil climbed to 67 cents and 16 points per pound, up over 150 points. Prices rallied sharply higher across the complex, adding a war premium from Middle East tensions and buzz around upcoming Renewable Volume Obligation news from the Trump Administration.Grains got a boost despite an uneventful USDA WASDE report that left US ending stocks steady at 350 million bushels. Speculators are eyeing potential Chinese buys ahead of the Trump Xi meeting in Beijing, even as US Gulf offers run a bit over Brazilian ones. Agweb notes spot crush margins rebounded to 2 dollars and 18 and a half cents per bushel. Broader commodities are surging on energy and gold, but soybeans are holding strong near two year highs per Trading Economics.Heres your takeaway: If youre a farmer holding beans, surging input costs like fertilizer from Strait of Hormuz risks mean watch those acres closely, maybe shift some toward soybeans which need less nitrogen. Traders, keep an eye on tomorrows export sales, expected at 10 to 30 million bushels.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Stay smart out there.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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98
Beans Break Twelve Bucks: Oil Surge and USDA Jitters Move the Market
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm your host Vanessa, and today we're diving into the hottest updates on soybean prices, what's driving the market, and tips to help you stay ahead.Right now, soybean futures are surging, with May contracts hitting twelve dollars and eighteen cents per bushel, up about seventeen cents this morning according to Total Farm Marketing. Two-month futures are pushing toward twelve dollars and sixteen cents per bushel, as reported by Databoks from Investing.com data. That's a solid gain, fueled by skyrocketing crude oil above one hundred dollars a barrel from ProFarmer, thanks to Middle East tensions boosting demand for soybean oil in biodiesel. Trading Economics notes futures touched a nearly three-year high around twelve dollars and ten cents.But hold on, ADM Investor Services says prices dipped a bit midday, down five to seven cents from peaks, showing some volatility. Eyes are on tomorrow's USDA WASDE report, where analysts expect tiny tweaks to ending stocks, maybe four million bushels lower for soybeans, per ProFarmer's Bloomberg survey. Brazil's harvest is at forty-seven percent, on pace but with quality worries in some areas.Geopolitics like the Iran situation are rippling through, per Farm Progress, pushing commodities higher. China might shift buys from Brazil, but US Gulf offers are pricier.Actionable tip: If you're trading or farming, watch oil prices and USDA tomorrow, and consider locking in gains on these highs. Diversify with corn if beans pull back.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share, and catch you next time for more soybean scoops!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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97
Bushels and Breakouts: How Crude Oil is Pushing Your Soybeans Past 12 Dollars
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. I'm Vanessa, your go-to guide for all things soybeans, and today we're diving into the freshest news on prices, market moves, and what it means for you.First up, the current trading price: as of this morning, May soybean futures are pushing over 12 dollars per bushel, with front-month contracts up 18 to 20 cents to around 11.24 dollars on the national cash bean average. Soybean meal is higher by 7.50 to 8.50 dollars, and oil is up 45 to 60 points, thanks to that big spike in crude oil and diesel futures spilling over. Ever.Ag Insights and ADM Investor Services confirm these gains are extending to new highs on Friday, with March ZSK26 at 1201-2, up 22 points.What's driving this rally? DTN Progressive Farmer reports soybean futures breaking over 12 dollars for the first time since early June 2024, fueled by oil prices even as U.S. exports lag behind last year at 61 percent of USDA estimates. Brazil's massive harvest is in full swing, estimated at 179.3 million metric tons by Dow Jones surveys, giving them a price edge, but traders are eyeing U.S.-China talks and a potential Trump-Xi summit for trade boosts. Nasdaq notes export commitments at 36 million metric tons, 84 percent of USDA goals.For you, the takeaway is simple: if you're holding soybeans or trading, watch South American yields and oil trends closely. This rally could signal planting season opportunities, but fundamentals like Brazil's record crop urge caution. Diversify into soybean meal exports, booming in Southeast Asia and the Middle East per U.S. Soybean Export Council leaders, where demand for protein is exploding.That's your daily update, folks. Thanks for tuning in, subscribe so you never miss a beat, and join me next time for more soybean insights. Talk soon!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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96
Bean There, Done That: Crude Oil Sparks Two-Year Soybean Highs
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey everyone, welcome back to the Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, I'm diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the big news: May soybean futures closed up nine and three-quarter cents at eleven dollars and seventy-nine and a quarter cents per bushel, hitting a nearly two-year high according to ProFarmer's After the Bell report. That's right near the daily high, and it's pulling the whole market higher thanks to surging soybean oil prices. Bean oil jumped two hundred eleven points to sixty-five dollars and seventy cents, boosted by crude oil hitting a nine-month high amid tensions in the Middle East. Total Farm Marketing notes soybean futures were up another three and a half cents this morning at eleven dollars and seventy-three cents, pushing toward mid-November highs.What's driving this? Strong technical buying and short covering, even with China buying more Brazilian soybeans at a discount. But U.S. farmers hold very little old crop beans, limiting selling pressure. ProFarmer also highlights soybean meal dipped slightly to three hundred nine dollars and thirty cents, but overall, it's a bullish vibe.For you listening, here's your takeaway: If you're holding soybeans or planning planting, watch crude oil and energy markets closely—they're spilling over big time. Consider locking in some prices now at these highs before volatility hits from global supplies or weather shifts. Crop insurance for twenty twenty-six looks favorable for soybeans over corn, per Farm Progress, so think ahead on rotations.That's your daily scoop—prices strong, oil leading the charge. Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe, share with your farming buddies, and I'll catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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95
Soybeans Climb Past 11.40 as Brazil Drought and China Demand Shake Up May Futures
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker, your go-to spot for the latest on soybeans prices, market trends, and smart trading tips. Im Vanessa Clark, and today were diving into the freshest soybeans news, including the current trading price to help you stay ahead in this fast-moving commodity world.First up, the numbers you have been waiting for. As of right now, soybeans futures on the Chicago Board of Trade are trading at around 11.42 US dollars per bushel for the May 2026 contract, up about 0.5 percent from yesterday close. That is according to the most recent data from CME Group. Spot prices for soybeans are hovering near 11.35 dollars per bushel in key US markets like Toledo and the Gulf Coast, per USDA reports. This modest uptick comes amid steady demand from China, our biggest buyer, who just inked new deals for over 1 million metric tons this week.On the news front, weather watchers are buzzing. Dry conditions in parts of Brazil, the worlds top soybeans producer, are raising concerns about the upcoming harvest. Reuters reports potential yield drops of up to 5 percent in Mato Grosso if rains do not pick up soon. Meanwhile, here in the US, the latest USDA crop progress shows 95 percent of soybeans harvested, with quality holding strong at 72 percent good or excellent. Export sales hit 1.2 million tons last week, beating expectations and giving prices a nice lift.Traders, heres your actionable takeaway. With prices stabilizing above 11.40, consider locking in sells if you are a producer eyeing profits, or watch for a breakout above 11.50 for bullish plays. Diversify with soybeans ETFs like Teucrium Soybean Fund if you are new to commodities. Always check real-time charts on platforms like Barchart for your moves.That is your daily update, friends. Thanks for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Hit subscribe, share with your farming buddies, and join me next time for more soybeans prices, news, and tips. Talk soon.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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94
Soybeans Climb on Trade Hopes While Oil Hits New Highs - Your Local Market Snapshot
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the current trading prices as of this evenings close. On the Chicago Board of Trade, May soybeans settled up seven cents at eleven dollars and seventy-one cents per bushel, while July is at eleven dollars and eighty-four cents. ADM Investor Services reports soybeans ranged from three to six cents higher today, with soybean meal up one to two dollars and oil steady to ten points higher. Closing markets from sources like Agris at Thamesville show 2026 crop soybeans up two cents at fourteen dollars and forty-six cents per bushel. That steady to higher action comes amid rebounding futures, fueled by US-China trade talks continuing and some weather soaking Brazilian crops, per Morningstar and Agweb updates.Looking broader, soybean oil is rallying hard, hitting two-year highs thanks to biofuel demand and spiking crude oil prices from Middle East tensions, as noted by Syngenta Canada. The Western Producer says USDA forecasts soybean oil prices rising to fifty-eight cents per pound in 2026-27, driven by massive US biofuel buys. For the year ahead, farmdoc daily pegs the 2026 projected price at eleven dollars and nine cents per bushel, up from last year.Heres your takeaway: If youre holding soybeans or planning your crop rotation, watch oil strength and trade news closely. That soybean-to-corn ratio around two point four could mean more soy acres next season, per market intel. Consider locking in some sales now if prices flirt higher, but hedge against volatility from South American supplies.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe so you never miss a price update, and well catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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93
Soybeans Rally Into March as Insurance Price Locks in Strong Protection for Growers
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today, were diving into the freshest soybeans news, including those key trading prices everyone is searching for to stay ahead in this volatile market.Right now, March soybeans futures are closing strong at eleven dollars and fifty-seven cents and a quarter per bushel, up nine and a half cents on the day, according to Brownfield Ag News. The nearby cash bean price from Nasdaq is even hitting ten dollars and eighty-nine cents and a half, up five and three-quarters cents, as soybeans post solid Friday gains to wrap up February. Spot market summaries from Ever.Ag Insights show March soybeans at eleven dollars and sixty-nine cents and a quarter, also up six cents, while soybean oil edges higher but meal dips a touch.On the news front, exports are lagging, with Total Farm Marketing reporting just fifteen million bushels sold for the week ending February nineteenth, below expectations and down forty-nine percent from last week. Thats now eighty-three percent of USdas export estimate, trailing the ninety-one percent average pace. Brazils harvest estimates vary, with Safras and Mercado at one hundred seventy-seven point seven two million metric tons and Rabobank at one hundred eighty-one million, flooding the market with cheaper beans.Big win for growers though: the spring crop insurance price for soybeans lands at eleven dollars and nine cents, up fifty-five cents from last year, per DTN Progressive Farmer. Thats stronger protection heading into planting, with USDA eyeing eighty-five million soybean acres versus ninety-four million for corn.Heres your actionable takeaway: if youre holding old crop, consider small risk-off sales now as November futures average eleven dollars and eight cents this month. Watch upcoming Trump-Xi talks and South American weather for price swings, and lock in that insurance by March fifteenth.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farming crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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92
Biofuel Buzz Lifts Beans as Export Pace Lags Behind
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the closing price for March soybeans on the Chicago Board of Trade came in at eleven dollars and forty-seven and three-quarters cents per bushel, down just a half cent on the day according to GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News reports. That slight dip came after some profit-taking following a strong run higher this week, with soybeans up thirteen and three-quarters cents overall so far. Soybean oil hit a fresh high at sixty-one cents and twenty-nine hundredths, up over a full cent, fueled by biofuel buzz.Big news on the demand side: the EPA is sending its biofuel blending plan to the White House soon, which could boost soybean oil use in fuels and lift crush demand here in the US, as noted by ADM Investor Services and Total Farm Marketing. Exports are lagging though, with US soybean shipments at the second-slowest pace in twenty-five years per DTN Progressive Farmer, and last weeks sales at four hundred seven thousand tonnes, down sharply. China might buy more after Lunar New Year, and Brazils massive crop could flood supplies later, pressuring prices.Year-to-date, soybeans are up eleven point six percent, a solid performer amid global ups and downs. Indian buyers are even canceling South American soybean oil cargoes to cash in on the rally.Herere your takeaways: if youre holding soybeans, watch biofuel news closely it could spark another leg up. Farmers, consider locking in some profits on new crop sales around fourteen dollars and change in spots like Ontario. Traders, keep an eye on export sales reports tomorrow for fresh clues.Thanks for tuning in, pals. Hit subscribe, share with your ag buddies, and well catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Stay smart out there!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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91
Brazil's Bumper Crop Floods the Market While US Farmers Bank on Biofuel Demand to Hold the Line
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.First up, the closing prices from the Chicago Board of Trade on February 25. March soybeans settled at 11 dollars and 48 and a quarter cents per bushel, up 8 and three quarter cents on the day. Thats a nice little rally, with May futures hitting 11 dollars and 65 cents. GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News both confirm those gains, showing soybeans leading the charge amid mixed grains.But heres the big story shaking things up: a massive supply avalanche from Brazil. Their 2025-26 harvest is projected at a record 180 million metric tons, per reports from MarketMinute and AgRural. Thats flooding the market, putting pressure on US prices despite brief hopes of Chinese buying that pushed futures over 11 bucks. Chinas favoring cheaper Brazilian beans, thanks to trade tensions and a 10 percent tariff on US soybeans, forcing our farmers to lean on domestic biofuel demand. The US soybean crush is set to hit 2.655 billion bushels this season, driven by renewable diesel.Brazilian farmers are dealing with slow harvest pace only at 30 percent done due to rains in Mato Grosso and high trucking costs up 15 to 20 percent. That temporary snag is giving some support, but expect more surplus soon.Actionable tip for you growers and traders: Watch Thursdays USDA Export Sales report, eyeing 400 thousand to 1 million tons for soybeans. Upcoming US-China talks in late March and the planting intentions report could spark moves. If youre holding, biofuels might floor prices around 11 dollars, but brace for volatility from that Brazilian glut.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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90
Soybeans Bounce Back: China Watch, Brazil Rains, and Your Spring Planting Play
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with me, Vanessa Clark. Today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, market moves, and what it all means for you.March 2026 CBOT soybeans closed at 11.39 and a half, up 5 and a quarter cents from yesterday, according to GX94 Radio closing prices. Thats a nice bounce back after some early dips, with front months trading 3 to 6 cents higher midmorning per Pro Farmer reports. Soybean futures hit a new three-month high recently as traders shift to May and July contracts, says CME Group.Whats driving this? Weaker US export inspections last week at 669 thousand metric tons, down from prior weeks per USDA data, but eyes are on China post-Lunar New Year for big buys. Brazil's harvest is about 25 to 30 percent done, slowed by rains, with crop consultant Dr. Michael Cordonnier cutting his production estimate to 178 million metric tons. Argentinas facing some dryness too, adding weather risk that could tighten global supply.Tariff talks are swirling after a Supreme Court ruling limits some presidential powers, keeping trade flows uncertain. Still, US exports are surging elsewhere outside China.Actionable tip: If youre holding soybeans, watch that 11.49 support level on May contracts and Chinas next moves. The soy-corn ratio near 2.4 might push more planting your way come spring. Stay nimble, check your local basis, and diversify buyers to hedge risks.Thanks for tuning in, besties. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time on Daily Soybeans Price Tracker!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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89
Soybean Shuffle: China Hesitates While Brazil Steals the Show
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, trade buzz, and what it all means for you.Right now, the March soybean futures are sitting at eleven dollars and thirty-four cents per bushel, down a few cents from Fridays close according to closing reports from GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News. Soybeans dipped slightly overnight too, down about seven cents early on, as ADM Investor Services notes, but they bounced back a bit midday with national cash prices hitting ten dollars and seventy-five cents per bushel per Barchart updates. Year to date, were still up nearly ten percent, showing some solid gains despite the wiggles.The big story shaking things up is uncertainty around China, the worlds top soybean buyer. After the Supreme Court struck down broad tariffs, analysts from ADM Investor Services and Reuters say China might skip that extra eight million metric tons President Trump was pushing for. They have already grabbed twelve million tons under last falls trade deal, but with Brazilian beans way cheaper thanks to their bumper crop, why pay more for ours? China bought four hundred sixteen thousand tons of US soybeans last week per USDA data, but exports are lagging overall at about twenty-five million metric tons so far this year.On the bright side, Argentinas soy got a rain boost, holding production steady at forty-eight point five million tons says the Buenos Aires Grain Exchange, and Brazil saw firm prices with the CEPEA index up to one hundred twenty-one Brazilian reals per bag. USDA is eyeing ten dollars and thirty cents average for next season.For you growers and traders, heres your takeaway: watch China closely and those tariff twists. If youre holding beans, consider locking in some sales soon while prices hover in the eleven-dollar range to hedge against more dips. Stay nimble, friends.Thanks for tuning in to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker. Hit subscribe, share with a buddy, and well catch you next time for more soybean scoops. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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88
Soybeans Dip on Court Ruling as South America Brings Record Harvest Home
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome back to Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, and today were diving into the latest on soybean prices, global production updates, and what it all means for you.First up, the closing prices from GX94 Radio and the Chicago Board of Trade. March soybeans settled at 11.37 and a half dollars per bushel, down 3 and a half cents on the day. May futures closed around 11.53 and a half, also easing a bit after hitting recent highs. Cash beans are hovering near 10.72 dollars per bushel. Year to date, soybeans are up a solid 10.5 percent according to ADM Investor Services, thanks to strong demand for soymeal and soyoil.On the news front, Paraguay is on track for a record soybean crop of 11.5 million tons with good weather helping the harvest, as reported by LSEG Research. Brazil bumped their outlook to 178.8 million tons, though some delays in the south could slow things. Argentinas crop looks steady at 47.4 million tons with helpful rains. Chinas imports leaned heavily on Brazil last year at over 82 million tons, and traders expect that to continue with favorable tariffs. Plus, US soybean sales picked up last week, and biofuel demand is boosting soyoil.A big market mover today: the Supreme Court ruled against using emergency powers for tariffs, adding some uncertainty that pressured prices lower, per Nasdaq and Pro Farmer reports. Looking ahead, USDA sees more soybeans planted in 2026 over corn.Herere your takeaway: if youre holding old crop, watch export sales reports closely for buying opportunities. For new crop planning, these record global supplies mean locking in basis early could protect your margins.Thanks for tuning in, friends. Subscribe so you never miss an update, and join me next time for more on soybeans. Take care.For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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87
Soybean Rally Heats Up: 85 Million Acres Ahead and Fund Money Pouring In
https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiThis is your Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark podcast.Hey friends, welcome to another episode of Daily Soybeans Price Tracker with Vanessa Clark. Im your host Vanessa, chatting with you like were kicking back over coffee about the latest in soybeans.Today, lets dive right into the numbers. The March soybeans futures closed at 11 dollars and 41 cents per bushel, up 7 and a half cents on the day according to GX94 Radio and Brownfield Ag News reports. Soybean meal finished at 304 dollars and 80 cents, up 90 cents, while soybean oil hit 59 dollars and 68 cents. Soybeans pushed higher throughout the session, gaining 4 to 5 cents midday as TradingView noted, bucking a slight dip in corn.Big news from the USDA Ag Outlook Forum: theyre forecasting more soybean acres for 2026 at 85 million, up from 81 million last year, with production climbing to 4.45 billion bushels on steady 53 bushel per acre yields. Red River Farm Network and ProFarmer highlight this shift from fewer corn acres, driven by biofuel demand soaring soybean oil use to 17.3 billion pounds. Exports should rebound to 1.7 billion bushels, though competition from Brazil lingers.Funds are buying in heavy, adding to longs per market updates, and soybean oil has rallied over 20 percent year to date on DTN Progressive Farmer insights. Prices look supported, but watch weather in Brazil and US-China trade vibes.Actionable tip: If youre holding soybeans, consider scaling out on rallies toward 11.50, or hedge with futures if planting more acres this spring. Stay nimble with these projections.Thanks for tuning in, buddies. Subscribe, share with your farm crew, and catch you next time for more Daily Soybeans Price Tracker updates. Take care!For more http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out Vanessa on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vanessaclarkipaiFor some deals, check out https://amzn.to/4hSgB4rThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Check out Vanessa Clark's Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/vane... This is your Soybeans Commidity Tracker podcast. For more info go to https://www.instagram.com/vane...https://www.quietplease.ai Or check out these deals https://amzn.to/3FkjUmwThis show includes AI-generated content.
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