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Daily Network News

  • May canola settled at C$704.90 per tonne on April 8, falling out of the sideways trading range it had held for the previous three weeks. Photo: Zak McLachlan

    ICE weekly: War news driving canola markets

    2 hours ago
  • An LPG gas tanker at anchor as traffic is down in the Strait of Hormuz, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Shinas, Oman, March 11, 2026. “The Middle East war is upending lives and livelihoods in the region and beyond. It has already triggered one of the largest disruptions to global energy markets in modern history,” said the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and the U.N. World Food Programme. Photo: REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

    War is increasing food prices, insecurity say IMF, World Bank and UN food agency

    4 hours ago
  • B.C. agrochemical startup gets $1.2M in federal funding

    6 hours ago
More News →

Pulses

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago. (Vito Palmisano/iStock/Getty Images)
Markets, Reuters

U.S. grains: Wheat hits one-week high on fears of escalating Russia-Ukraine war

By Julie Ingwersen, Reuters November 19, 2024
U.S. wheat futures rose for a third-straight session on Tuesday, posting a one-week high on fears of escalating war in the Black Sea breadbasket region amid rising tensions between Moscow and Washington over Ukraine, analysts said.

AAFC slightly adjusted a few numbers in its November report.
Barley, Canola, Cereals, Corn, Crops, Lentils, News, Oats, Peas, Pulses, Soybeans, Spring Wheat, Winter Wheat

Only small changes in latest AAFC estimates

By Glen Hallick - MarketsFarm November 19, 2024
There were only small changes to the updated supply/demand estimates from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) released Nov. 19. All of the other data in the AAFC report were carried over from its October report.


File photo of a wheat field in northern Ukraine on July 14, 2016. (File photo: Reuters/Valentyn Ogirenko)
News, Reuters

Ukraine 2025 wheat crop seen rising on larger sowing area, minister says

By Pavel Polityuk, Reuters November 19, 2024
Ukraine's wheat harvest may increase to up to 25 million metric tons next year from an expected 22 million tons this year thanks to a larger sowing area, the first deputy agriculture minister Taras Vysotskiy told Reuters in an interview.

(Medioimages/Photodisc/Getty Images)
Markets, Reuters

U.S. grains: Wheat rallies as lifting of Ukraine missile restrictions sparks fears of war escalation

By Renee Hickman, Reuters November 19, 2024
U.S. wheat futures climbed on Monday after the White House lifted restrictions that had blocked Ukraine from using U.S. missiles to strike deep within Russia, sparking concerns of an escalating war in the Black Sea breadbasket region.


(ADM.com)
News, Reuters

ADM posts drop in Q3 earnings in delayed report, revises segment core profit

By Reuters November 18, 2024
Global grain trader Archer-Daniels-Midland posted a drop in third-quarter profit on Monday and said in its delayed filing that it has revised its calculation of total segment operating profit.

Photo: Thinkstock
Peas, Pulses, Soybeans

Pulse Weekly: Growing interest in pulse crops from Manitoba farmers

By Adam Peleshaty November 18, 2024
More Manitoba farmers are interested in adding soybeans and other pulse crops into their crop rotations for the 2025-26 crop year, said a production specialist from MPSG.


(Collab Media/iStock/Getty Images)
General, News

Agfinity shuttered, new brokerage facing online questions

By Phil Franz-Warkentin November 18, 2024
Stony Plain, Alta. grain broker Agfinity laid off employees and started the process of declaring bankruptcy in mid-October, according to former employees. Three former employees are working at launching a new brokerage firm, Grain Gateway Canada, but have run into some strangeness online.

Erin Gowriluk. Photo: Canadian Grains Council
News

Gowriluk named vice president of International Grain Trade Coalition

By Geralyn Wichers November 18, 2024
Canadian Grains Council (CGC) president Erin Gowriluk has been named vice president of the International Grain Trade Coalition (IGTC).


The Chicago Board of Trade Building. Photo: Kevinstack22/iStock/Getty Images
Markets, Reuters

U.S. grains: Soybeans rise on China’s export incentives change, short covering

By Renee Hickman, Reuters November 15, 2024
Chicago Board of Trade soy futures rallied on Friday after China said it would cut its export incentives for used cooking oil, a move that could curtail the flood of imports into the U.S., market analysts said.

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago. (Vito Palmisano/iStock/Getty Images)
Markets, Reuters

U.S. grains: Chicago soybeans fall on worries over domestic demand

By Renee Hickman, Reuters November 14, 2024
Chicago Board of Trade soybean and corn futures fell for a fourth straight day, as traders worried that biofuel policy changes under the incoming U.S. presidential administration of Republican Donald Trump would chill domestic demand.


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