(Bloomberg) -- Chicago corn futures rose for the
first day in five on speculation hot and dry weather in the U.S.
Midwest may damage yields for the biggest U.S. crop. Soybean
futures also gained. Wheat futures fell.
Rainfall was less-than-expected yesterday and the National
Weather Service's 6 to 10 day forecast showed above normal
temperatures in the U.S. Midwest, including Indiana, Ohio and
Illinois, said Kenji Kobayashi, an analyst at Kanetsu Asset
Management in Tokyo.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
first day in five on speculation hot and dry weather in the U.S.
Midwest may damage yields for the biggest U.S. crop. Soybean
futures also gained. Wheat futures fell.
Rainfall was less-than-expected yesterday and the National
Weather Service's 6 to 10 day forecast showed above normal
temperatures in the U.S. Midwest, including Indiana, Ohio and
Illinois, said Kenji Kobayashi, an analyst at Kanetsu Asset
Management in Tokyo.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
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