Group 1 - The core viewpoint of the article indicates that corn, wheat, and soybean prices at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange mostly increased on August 11, with corn and soybean prices rising due to external factors such as President Trump's comments urging China to increase soybean orders [1] - The most actively traded December corn contract closed at $4.0775 per bushel, up 2.25 cents or 0.55% from the previous trading day [1] - The September wheat contract remained unchanged at $5.1450 per bushel, while the November soybean contract rose by 22.75 cents or 2.30% to $10.1025 per bushel [1] Group 2 - The USDA's export inspection report released on August 11 showed that for the week ending August 7, corn export inspections totaled 58.7 million bushels, soybean inspections were 19 million bushels, and wheat inspections were 13.4 million bushels [1] - Cumulative export inspections for the current crop year are reported as 2.485 billion bushels for corn, 1.777 billion bushels for soybeans, and 160.4 million bushels for wheat [1] Group 3 - Market analysts express skepticism regarding whether corn prices have reached an annual low, especially in light of the upcoming crop report and world agricultural supply and demand forecast from the USDA [1]
【环球财经】美豆11日大幅上涨
Xin Hua Cai Jing·2025-08-11 23:03