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CommStock Reports

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  • 03/08/2026 Sunday Market Preview
    Grains were set to start on firmer footing after closing last week strong, but most commodities join oil in looking vulnerable to corrective action as there are lulls in the news about Iran. In the Headlines Daylight saving time kicks in today to spring the clock forward. The 2026 spring equinox will occur on March 20th. Weekend developments in the Middle East included Israeli attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure, with major fuel storage facilities hit. Iran carried out strikes in Bahrain and Kuwait. The Islamic council of Iran announced it had chosen a new supreme leader but did not announce who it was. The Iran-backed Houthi militants based in Yemen made new threats about entering the war, with observers watching the possibility for the Houthi to target vessels in the Red Sea and to launch attacks against Saudi Arabia. Many headlines addressed the conflict's impact on fuel prices, noting a more than 10 percent jump in the national gasoline average last week and an even bigger move for diesel. Closure of the Strait of Hormuz has crimped flows of oil so that stockpiles are swelling for countries like Kuwait, Iraq, and Qatar. Kuwait's state oil company declared a force majeure and was cutting production. Nearby WTI crude oil futures surged higher by $23 per barrel to settle just over $90. The impact of war was being felt in the fuel and fertilizer markets. Urea prices were leading the surge for fertilizers with a 5 percent jump from last month, to $611 per ton. The DTN ...
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  • 03/6/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – War Flows are Multi-directional for Now
    The escalation of conflict in the Middle East has triggered a rapid reshuffling of capital across global markets. Rather than a universal risk-off move, the initial reaction has produced a mixed rotation of money as investors adjust war premium among different asset classes. Money was flowing out of some sectors and into others; this week, it was out of equities and into oil, the dollar, and grains. The concepts of war premium have been widely covered to explain why certain markets have moved counter to their normal relationships – for example, the dollar and commodity prices rising together when they usually express inverse tendencies. Now a major risk for commodities is that the pressures from the broader financial market become too much so that rotation among markets ceases, giving way to a flush of funds in one direction – out.   Institutional money flows will help determine the grain rally's staying power along with the reportable managed money traders that have been active from both sides of bullish and bearish. Friday afternoon's trader positions report was expected to show hedge funds flipping net-long in corn futures for the first time since December. Last week was the first time the funds had turned net-long in Kansas City wheat since 2023. Including this this week's action, funds will have their soybean position rivaling the record net-long of 253,000 contracts. Speculative decision-making will intersect with how commercial hedgers respond to price changes. The combined investment money inflows remained significantly more aggressive than farmer selling for ...
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  • 03/06/2026 Grain, Crude Oil Prices Continue to Surge as War Rages On
    03/06/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Grain, Crude Oil Prices Continue to Surge as War Rages On New Reco Day 2: Advance New Crop 2026 Soybean Sales 20% against March 2027 futures at $11.45.  Note: The 20% new-crop corn sales against March 2027 futures were recorded at $4.81, as reflected in the table at the end of this report. ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial, and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Grain and soy markets are firmer this morning, led by double-digit gains in the winter wheat markets. Soyoil futures faced profit-taking after Thursday’s surged pushed front-month futures to the highest since mid-2023, though they are firmer early this morning and just below yesterday’s highs. Crude oil futures continue to surge, with the front-month contract reaching the highest level since April 2024. May corn futures are the highest since the Jan. 12 post-USDA report collapse and May soybeans are the highest since late-May 2024. New-crop December and November soybeans are at their highest levels since May 2024. SRW wheat futures are trading below Monday’s intraday highs, while HRW wheat is at the highest since early July and HRS the highest since late August. Global benchmark Brent crude oil has rallied 20% this week, while U.S. WTI futures have surged 25% to the highest since April 2024. Developments Tied to Middle East Conflict The bombings in the Middle East moved ...
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  • This was not the report that I had prepared for today but there are a few points, given the geopolitical turmoil, that I feel the need to address. This will follow with the prepared report. Our Chief-broker Eric Relph's son serves in the 4trth Infantry Division. He says that Some of his counterparts in elements of the 3rd Infantry and 8th Airbourne contingent have been called up for deployment to the Mid-East. Boots heading for Iranian ground? Not if they can help it but nothing is off the table. I have no inside info but it would be my guess as to where they could be headed.   Iran says the strait of Hormuz is closed and traffic is off 90%. The oil market is alarmed and that angst is spreading though markets. The US must open the strait of Hormuz to oil transit. President Trump says the US will insure the ships and cargos and provide escorts. There are reportedly 60 large tankers waiting outside the gulf for word that it is safe to enter. Many others are trapped in the gulf waiting for an opportunity to exit. The trade needs to see convoys successfully transit the strait, entering and exiting without incident, in order to build upon confidence that the US is in control of the military and commercial situation there. This could be a flash point for markets. If and when transit of the strait is successful…the war could effectively be at an end militarily. If Iran cannot block ...
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  • 03/05/26 Markets Factoring in Extended War Risks
    03/05/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Markets Factoring in Extended War Risks New Reco Day 1: Advance New Crop 2026 Soybean Sales 20% against March 2027 futures at $11.45.  Note: The 20% new-crop corn sales against March 2027 futures were recorded at $4.81, as reflected in the table at the end of this report. ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial, and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Grain and soy markets traded higher overnight with the exception of soy meal, which modestly favored the downside. Crude oil strengthened after Wednesday’s pause, briefly poking to a new high for the move but failing to find sustained buying above Tuesday’s intraday highs. Both gold futures and the U.S. dollar index traded higher overnight. The global bond selloff continued. The war with Iran entered its sixth day, with little sign of easing, as Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said retaliatory attacks will intensify in coming days and an Iranian official told state television Tehran has “no intention of negotiating with the U.S.” The duration of military operations remains uncertain, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth saying “it could be six, it could be eight, it could be three” weeks before they are wrapped up. China’s Five-Year Plan: Slower Economic Growth; Ag Technology Expansion China’s National People’s Congress unveiled a sweeping roadmap for the country’s economic and political future via the “Five-Year Plan.” Highlights: China signaled it is entering ...
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  • 03/04/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – Something’s Gotta Give Pretty Much Says It All
    The S&P is in a long-term bull market until it isn't. Analysts who have predicted an extrapolation of the trend have been right. Sooner or later a 1980-like event is reached when an existential fundamental change occurs. Demographics that have driven the stock market bull are likely beginning to change as baby-boomers make withdrawals instead of new investments. Upside momentum slowed which typically occurs before a top. Some argue that this is just a rotation from the Big-7 stocks which had dominated gains last year into the balance of the S%P stocks. Investors have become indoctrinated that breaks are always buying opportunities and recoveries follow. They have pretty much become locked-in bulls. There is hubris among investors who think that the market always rises. Sideways grind can also serve as a correction. Resistance and support levels have formed. What will precipitate a breakout? Wars tend to bring economic activity where debt is accumulated as stimulus. Inflation is also impacted. That would drive new economic activity but worsen an already heady debt accumulation. The US has no oil shortage and may temporarily supply the world with oil due to a disruption in the Gulf war with Iran. The situation over the strait of Hormuz has the markets attention. If the war with Iran is successful then oil prices will retreat and the world will be a safer place as the Mid-East becomes attractive for new investment.  We should soon see the grind in the S&P resolve in a breakout.   I borrowed this ...
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  • 03/04/2026 Markets, Volatility Calm a Little Overnight
    03/04/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Markets, Volatility Calm a Little Overnight New Reco Day 2: Advance New Crop 2026 Corn Sales 20% against March futures to take cash sales coverage to 60%. Maintain new crop hedges in place or add to them as coverage benefits have improved in the last month. Call your broker for more details. ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Grain and soy markets traded in relatively tight ranges overnight as volatility in outside markets eased. Crude oil futures remained firm, though gains were limited by a report that Iran had made indirect contact with the U.S. to discuss an end to the war – though it appears the offer is being brushed off in Washington. Gold rebounded from Tuesday amid safe-haven buying, while the U.S. dollar index pulled back. President Trump said the United States is prepared to deploy the U.S. Navy to escort oil and gas tankers through the Persian Gulf and provide insurance coverage for vessels transiting the region. The move is aimed at stabilizing global energy flows as the conflict with Iran disrupts shipping routes and pushes energy prices higher. Trump said U.S. military escorts could begin “as soon as possible” if necessary to protect commercial vessels traveling through the Strait of Hormuz — one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints. The Strait of Hormuz handles ...
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  • 03/03/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – Is This The Commodity Classic High?
    Attendance at the Commodity Classic supposedly reached a new record.  That was both surprising to me (and apparently the organizers at the event) considering the state of the ag economy.  I did feel that farmers in general were not quite as giddy as last year.  The prior year by the time the event took place, corn had rallied over $1.15 off its low, slowly poking its head above $5 per bushel.  Everyone kept whispering amongst themselves how much old crop they had left to gauge whether they could take advantage of that rally.  I remember following behind a couple of guys as we were walking into the convention, and they were discussing that very topic.  One of the guys scoffed at $5 corn, declaring that he was holding out for $5.50.  That proved to be a mistake.   Ironically, the market appears to be working on another rally during the Commodity Classic.  I wonder if we should start to come up with a name for it.  We have the John Deere low, so perhaps this is the Commodity Classic high?  Like last year, we advised rewarding this rally with additional sales.  We advised selling $5 calls.  I remember the crowd chuckled a little bit when I told them that time would tell how smart that was.  That turned out to be the high of 2025.   I can't tell you how Iran will respond in this war or how long it will last.  But I do believe that fundamentals still win out in the ...
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  • 03/03/26 Markets Pricing in Renewed Inflation Concerns
    03/03/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Markets Pricing in Renewed Inflation Concerns New Reco Day 1: Advance New Crop 2026 Corn Sales 20% against March futures to take cash sales coverage to 60%. Maintain new crop hedges in place or add to them as coverage benefits have improved in the last month. Call your broker for more details. Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Grain and soy futures rallied overnight, led by double-digit gains in soybeans. Corn, soybeans, soyoil, HRW wheat and HRS wheat are trading above last Friday’s closing levels, though below the initial Sunday night overnight highs. Soymeal and SRW wheat are still well below their pre-war levels. Crude oil futures continue to surge, with the front-month contract reaching the highest level on the continuation chart since last June. The U.S. dollar index jumped to its highest since Jan. 19 and is nearly back to “par” (100.00). Safe-haven buying in gold eased overnight. Global stock markets, U.S. stock futures and global bonds are under pressure, as inflation concerns have reignited amid surging energy prices and supply-chain disruptions, with President Trump vowing to do “whatever it takes” with Iran. Some economists are warning about stagflation if the war with Iran persists for an extended period. Greer Highlights Trump’s 2026 Trade Policy Agenda U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer delivered the 2026 Trade Policy ...
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  • 03/02/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – Let’s Hope Hubris Becomes our Greatest Fear
    Advance New Crop 2026 Corn Sales 20% against March futures to take cash sales coverage to 60%. Maintain new crop hedges in place or add to them as coverage benefits have improved in the last month. Call your broker for more details.   ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results.***   I am on sabbatical in Honolulu Hawaii, happy not to be in Mexico. We learn everything 4 hours later than you at home. When hearing of the US strike on Iran my wife asked for assurance that Iran could not strike the US. We had a view of Waikiki and I pointed out a cargo container ship not far out in the ocean. I said how it could happen would be that the roof of containers on the ship would open and a swarm of drones would fly out and strike resorts up and down Waikiki producing panic and chaos. I do not know enough about US intelligence to know how high a risk that is but it is how an asymmetrical war would be fought. It made her think.   Hawaii is an island military base but more focused on China than the mid-east. I am optimistic that our military will achieve the objectives given to it against Iran. The world would be a better place without that belligerent regime. China is watching what we ...
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  • 030226 Volatility, War Premiums Spike
    03/02/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Volatility, War Premiums Spike On the Grains Soy oil futures shot sharply higher overnight, posting contract highs on the daily charts and reaching the highest level since September 2023 on the continuation chart. Soyoil was supported by surging crude oil prices in reaction to the attacks on Iran and resulting conflict throughout the Middle East. Corn, soybeans and wheat gapped higher at the start of overnight trade, though all three filled those gaps, with buyer interest waning early this morning. Gold futures are higher, while the U.S. dollar index rose to its highest since Jan. 22. The major escalation of tensions in the Middle East raises concerns about global energy security and financial-market stability. The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s most critical oil transit chokepoint, accounting for passage of around one-quarter of global seaborne oil trade and significant volumes of LNG shipments. Maritime authorities say there has been no recognized legal closure of the Strait of Hormuz or formal navigation warning declaring the route off limits. However, tankers have reportedly paused, anchored or delayed entry while operators reassess risk following attacks and heightened military activity in the Persian Gulf. Maritime insurers are canceling existing war-risk policies and repricing coverage at higher levels within the Persian Gulf. Prior coverage costs, near roughly 0.25% of a vessel’s replacement value, have jumped significantly, by as much as 50% in some cases. Most maritime insurers say they will withdraw war risk insurance cover for ships entering the Persian Gulf ...
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  • 3/1/2026 Sunday Market Preview
    Grains would find support from crude oil's response to the conflict with Iran, but a strong bid has yet to reveal itself as traders otherwise watch out for the possibility of a buy-the-rumor/ sell-the-fact reaction. In the Headlines The U.S. and Israel launched military operations against Iran that continues on Sunday morning. Initial strikes killed top leaders including Iran's Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Iran's Islamic government has appointed interim leadership and carried out retaliatory strikes in Israel and on U.S. assets in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, and the United Arab Emirates. This week will show the depth of control maintained by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard fighters that may have encouragement to defect if promised immunity. The coming days will also include debate in Congress over war powers. President Trump said on Sunday morning that the operation was going "very well" and moving "ahead of schedule," but it was later reported that three U.S. troops were killed and at least 5 others injured. Three oil tankers have reportedly been attacked in the Persian Gulf. Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, which sees roughly a quarter of global shipments of crude oil and natural gas. The Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen may also disrupt commercial activities in the Red Sea that handle another 10+ percent of energy flows. China is the biggest customer of energy products coming through the region. Both sides are preparing for President Trump's visit to China scheduled for March 31 – April 2, although the meeting with Xi Jinping ...
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  • 02/27/26 Afternoon CommStock Report- Everything is Political
    So much about markets is political these days. Is that just the nature of things under President Trump, or is it only recency bias because everything has always been and always will be political? It would seem that political sensitivities are truly more heightened than ever in the agricultural markets, with politics serving as a primary driver of prices according to the frequent headlines that cover tariffs and trade, biofuels policy, monetary policy, farm programs and food security. Grain and livestock markets are currently guided by new developments on major political issues being either freshly revealed or imminent.   February was notable for starting off with a soybean rally triggered by President Trump's social media post about wanting to see more purchases from China. Attention to Chinese follow through or lack thereof was ultimately superseded by bullish biofuels news. The month of March is now tagged for bringing the government's goal of finalizing renewable fuel blending volume levels, which were often speculated about this month in anticipation of the Environmental Protection Agency sending its completed rules to the White House. Biofuel policy changes were perceived to be particularly friendly for soybean oil futures, which generated a gain of 15 percent for the month.   Soybean oil futures found an additional boost from bullish leanings on the export outlook. The prospects of a new trade agreement with India put to question whether a return of demand from the world's top bean oil importer would spark more competition with the U.S. soy processing sector as well ...
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  • 02/27/2026 Grains Poised for Weekly, Monthly Gains
    02/27/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Grains Poised for Weekly, Monthly Gains New Reco: Day 3: Advance 2025 wheat sales by 50% against May futures. Sell 25% of 2026 wheat basis December futures. ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial, and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Winter wheat markets led a round of buying in the grain and soy markets overnight. For the week, soybeans are sharply higher, corn futures are mildly firmer and SRW wheat is now working on gains, while HRW wheat is still trading below last Friday’s closing level. For the month, corn, soybeans and the wheat markets are all sharply higher. Crude oil futures are more than $1 higher amid rising tensions in the Middle East. The U.S. State Department authorized the departure of non-emergency staff and their families from Mission Israel due to “safety risks,” according to a post on X by the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem. A U.S. delegation left Geneva disappointed with the progress of Thursday’s nuclear talks with Iran, Bloomberg reported citing a person familiar with the situation, although officials from Iran and mediator Oman were more upbeat. More talks are planned for next week. Traders are also awaiting OPEC+’s meeting on Sunday for signals on future production policy. Aside from the geopolitical noise, today is the last trading day for February, so month-end trade could also create some fireworks. The South ...
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  • 02/26/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – You Are Never Totally Safe in Mexico
    Security experts at the State Department and CIA warn US Travelers vacationing in Mexico that they are in danger. As a general rule these vacationers that I talk to push back and rationalize that where they go is safe and it is just the rest of the country at risk. The “rest of the country” is now up to 20 of the 32 states in Mexico and I do not believe that there is any barrier to the danger. It could be said that the US is not totally safe either but the ICE confrontation was primarily in two states, Minnesota and Maine, so far, and while there were protests, airports stayed open here. We have acquaintances trying to get home who were stranded at one of the airports closed down in Mexico…my wife following them on Facebook. The stories of many relating their condition of safety, sound delusional to me. Cars blow up outside and they can hear gunshots but they claim to be safe. They may be right because so far as I know no tourists have been harmed. The rent-a-cop at the condo is not going to protect you from a sicario. I have Canadian relatives, angry over Trump, who sold their winter trailer in Florida vowing to never set foot in the US again. They were scheduled for a month in Mexico starting this week. Where they are going has not been cleared and I don’t think that being Canadian will protect them. Thousands of US ...
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  • 02/26/2026 Soybeans Continue to Climb
    02/26/2026 Click Above to Watch the Morning Market Talk Video Soybeans Continue to Climb New Reco: Day 2: Advance 2025 wheat sales by 50% against May futures. Sell 25% of 2026 wheat basis December futures. ***Futures trading involves risk. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options is substantial, and each investor and/or trader must consider whether this is a suitable investment. Past performance is not indicative of future results. On the Grains Soybean futures extended gains overnight, along with soymeal, as May soybeans moved to less than a dime from the November high. Corn followed soybeans and soymeal to the upside. Soyoil futures pulled back from Wednesday’s contract highs, following crude oil lower. May Wheat futures were quietly mixed overnight, though SRW contracts are firming early this morning. Crude oil futures are around $1 lower as traders wait for details from the nuclear talks between U.S. and Iranian officials. U.S. negotiators were expected to make it clear Iran must dismantle its three main nuclear sites at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan and deliver all of its remaining enriched uranium to the United States. They were also expected to insist that any nuclear deal must last forever and not sunset. Iran pledged flexibility ahead of the indirect talks, though it wasn’t expected to meet all of the U.S. requests. India’s Crops at Risk with Expected March Heat India is likely to record one of its warmest Marches on record, with above-average temperatures forecast in key wheat and rapeseed-growing states, potentially cutting yields, an official with the India Meteorological Department ...
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  • 02/25/26 Afternoon CommStock Report – Brazil’s Corn Crop Off to a Good Start
    Despite abundant rainfall, Brazil's 2026 soybean harvest maintains at a fluid pace above their historical average.  Brazil was over one-third finished heading into last weekend and will be close to 40% complete by this Saturday.  I am less concerned about the soybean crop at this point and more interested in the second crop corn that follows.  The majority of the 2026 has enough rainfall to get it to the finish line.  Later planted beans will still need another rain, but the forecast shows adequate rainfall through March in most of the Northern growing regions which represent 70% of Brazil's production output.  Southern Brazil is still the big question mark where states like RGDS continue to face a drying trend in the next 30 days.   Second crop corn is going in right on the heels of the combines, usually following less than half a day's work behind the harvest.   Mato Grosso represents almost half of Brazil's second crop corn output, and they are nearly 70% planted going into last weekend, slightly behind their 5-year average but in lockstep with last year's pace.   The farms in central Mato Grosso we visited are already done, having started as early as Christmas.  Roughly 30% or more of Brazil's second crop corn will go in beyond the ideal window of February 20th.  This is normal.  Most of these growers recognize yield potential drops as the crop cycle enters the dry season, but they are still willing to take the risk anyway.   We finished planting second crop corn ...
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