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GRAINS-Wheat hits new 5-year low as supply pressure builds

ReutersAug 6, 2025 1:14 PM

By Gus Trompiz and Peter Hobson

- Chicago wheat futures slipped to a new five-year low on Wednesday, while corn set more contract lows as ample global supply hung over the cereal markets.

Soybeans edged higher, recovering from a four-month low with help from a bounce in crude oil.

The most active wheat contract on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) Wv1 was down 0.4% by the end of the overnight trading session at $5.06-1/4 a bushel.

Shortly before the trading pause, it touched its weakest since August 2020 at $5.05-3/4, just under a previous five-year low of $5.06-1/4 struck in May.

CBOT December corn CZ25 was down 0.4% at $4.00-1/2 a bushel. It earlier touched a latest contract low at $4.00-1/4 as it continued to test the psychological $4 floor.

"With U.S. corn crop potential still looking very strong, ongoing wheat harvest pressure in the Northern Hemisphere, and no major concerns in the Southern Hemisphere, funds appear willing to continue adding to their short positions," Donatas Jankauskas, analyst with commodity data platform CM Navigator, said in a note.

Funds have been net sellers of Chicago wheat for the last six trading sessions, traders say.

Northern Hemisphere production is still pouring onto the market, with talk that crop from central Russia is reaching ports to ease concerns about availability after poor early harvest results in southern Russia, traders said.

There were question marks about wheat quality in Russia as well as northern Europe, but volumes appeared ample in the face of moderate demand.

"Quality can be a problem in some areas, but quantity is more than enough," Rabobank analyst Vitor Pistoia said of wheat.

"We don't have much that can stop us from going to $5."

Recent rainfall has also boosted the outlook for subsequent harvests in Canada, Australia and Argentina.

Wheat was further facing knock-on pressure from corn, against which it competes for livestock feed demand.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Monday issued condition ratings that showed U.S. corn conditions were at their highest in nine years, reinforcing the prospect of a bumper U.S. harvest as crops emerge from the crucial pollination period.

A big second corn crop in Brazil is already flowing onto the market ahead of the autumn U.S. harvest.

CBOT soybeans Sv1 were up 0.3% at $9.93-1/2 a bushel, moving away from a four-month low at $9.86 touched on Friday and Monday.

Prices at 1300 GMT

Last

Change

Pct Move

CBOT wheat Wv1

506.25

-2.00

-0.39

CBOT corn Cv1

400.50

-1.50

-0.37

CBOT soy Sv1

993.50

2.75

0.28

Paris wheat BL2U5

194.25

0.75

0.39

Paris maize EMAc1

191.75

-0.25

-0.13

Paris rapeseed COMc1

472.75

-2.75

-0.58

WTI crude oil CLc1

66.24

1.08

1.66

Euro/dlr EUR=

1.16

0.01

0.43

Most active contracts - Wheat, corn and soy US cents/bushel, Paris futures in euros per metric ton

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