Crop Futures Drop on Fear U.S.-China Spat May Disrupt Trade Deal

Crop futures declined in Chicago on concerns that worsening U.S.-China relations could derail purchases of American farm products under the phase one trade deal. Soybeans fell for a second day and corn dropped for a third, while wheat snapped a three-day gain. Tensions have flared over China’s handling of the coronavirus and the country’s access …

Li’s Fiscal Boost Fails to Spark Metals

Premier Li Keqiang delivered his speech to the National People’s Congress against a risk-averse backdrop of Beijing’s tightening grip on Hong Kong and increasingly testy relations with Washington. Li reported that China has dropped its numerical growth target — a move perceived as negative for metals like steel — but plans to boost fiscal support …

Iron Ore’s Strength Set to Linger Longer on Brazil Supply Woes

Escalating concerns that the coronavirus pandemic may curb iron ore supply in Brazil are set to further support prices — already at an eight-month high — and are pushing back forecasts for the timing of a descent into the $70s. Citigroup Inc., which said in early May that a fall to $70 a ton was …

China Abandons Hard Growth Target, Shifts Stimulus Focus to Jobs

The Chinese government abandoned its decades-long practice of setting an annual target for economic growth amid the storm of uncertainty unleashed by the coronavirus pandemic, and said it would continue to increase stimulus. Speaking at the National People’s Congress in Beijing on Friday morning, Premier Li Keqiang delivered an annual policy address that instead laid …

Wheat Highest in More Than a Week on Signs of Lower U.S. Yields

Wheat futures climbed for a third day to the strongest level in more than a week on signs of lower winter crop yields in parts of the U.S. and as Russia’s production may come in smaller than thought. Drought conditions are limiting yield potential in southwestern and west-central Kansas, Aaron Harries, vice president of research and operations …