Corn Futures Add Cents Through the Week as Export Demand Sustains Momentum

Corn contracts demonstrated resilience in recent trading, with futures prices advancing across the front-month delivery dates. The market’s measured gains, tallied in cents, reflected a combination of structural support and sustained international buying interest that continues to underpin prices in early March.

Price Gains Measured in Cents Across Contract Months

The week saw corn futures posting incremental advances, with March contracts experiencing a 4 1/4 cent decline while other months captured modest upside. Measured in cents rather than full dollar moves, these incremental shifts highlight the market’s focus on deliberate value adjustments. The March 26 contract closed at $4.27 1/2, representing a 1 3/4 cent gain. May 26 futures settled at $4.39 3/4, up 3 1/2 cents on the week, while July 26 contracts advanced to $4.48 1/4, posting a 3 3/4 cent increase. The CmdtyView national average cash corn price rose 1 3/4 cent to $3.94 1/4, maintaining firmness in the physical market.

Cash Corn and Wheat Support Bolster the Market

A significant tailwind emerged from strength in the wheat complex, which provided spillover support for the corn market. With just one week remaining in the Crop Insurance price discovery period, the December corn contract has averaged $4.60 at the close—a dime below the comparable period from the prior year. This year-over-year comparison underscores the shifting price dynamics in the commodity landscape and highlights the importance of weekly price movements, even when measured in single cents.

Export Appetite Demonstrates Strength in Sales Volume

Export sales data continues to validate the strength of global demand for American corn. Old crop sales reached 1.47 million metric tons in the week ending February 12, a figure that, while down from the prior week, still surpassed the comparable period from last year by 1.1 percent. New crop commitments totaled 65,700 MT in that same window. Japan emerged as the leading buyer with 381,500 MT of total purchases, followed by Mexico at 270,100 MT and Taiwan at 127,300 MT. South Korean importers additionally tendered purchases of 132,000 MT in overnight trading, underscoring the breadth of international participation in the U.S. corn market.

Spec Fund Positioning Shifts as Trading Activity Evolves

The Commitment of Traders report released on the afternoon of February 17 revealed shifts in speculative positioning. The spec fund net long position contracted by 20,795 contracts during the week, culminating in a net short position of 27,415 contracts. These positioning adjustments reflect evolving sentiment among fund traders navigating the interplay between strong export demand and domestic price movements measured in cents on either side of key price levels.

The convergence of supportive wheat prices, sustained export interest, and deliberate fund repositioning has created a backdrop where corn futures continue to attract participant interest, with price discovery playing out through incremental advances in the cents category across the delivery curve.

CORN-1.3%
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