Corn Eases From June Highs
2025-11-10 17:09
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
Corn futures traded below $4.30 per bushel, retreating from June highs as an expanding global supply backdrop outpaces near-term demand.
South American offers have grown sharply more competitive with Brazil approaching a near-record crop and Argentina pencilled in for a very large harvest, boosting world availability.
US exports have been solid but not large enough to absorb the extra southern-hemisphere bushels, so traders have marked down US values as cheaper FOB offers undercut competitiveness.
At home the harvest continues to push more bushels into cash channels while crop insurance flows and softer bids have reduced near-term support.
Ethanol blending and export demand provide pockets of lift, but those supports have not offset ample supply or trading positioning ahead of the USDA November supply and demand update, leaving prices on the back foot.