Force majeure declared for CBOT soy shipping stations

Published: January 4, 2016

, , , ,

(Lisa Guenther photo)

Chicago | Reuters –– CME Group declared force majeure for all soybean shipping stations until further notice because of flooding on the Illinois River, a notice from the exchange operator said Monday.

A majority of facilities on the river, which are delivery points for soybean futures traded on CME’s Chicago Board of Trade, are unable to load crops due to high water levels, according to the notice.

The force majeure declaration means that delivery contracts do not have to be filled in their agreed time frame.

Read Also

China resumed U.S. soybean purchases after the two countries’ leaders met in late October, with the White House saying China had also agreed to buy at least 25 million metric tons annually over the next three years, starting in 2026. Photo: Getty Images Plus

CBOT Weekly: Additional soybean purchases strengthen U.S. soy

There were good gains for the Chicago soy complex during the week ended Feb. 4, due to positive news that Wednesday.

The move is not expected to have a significant impact on CBOT soybean futures “unless it remains in place for a very long time,” said Terry Reilly, analyst with Futures International in Chicago.

The CBOT January futures contract is in its two-week delivery period but so far no contracts have been delivered against futures. As of Monday afternoon, no contracts were registered for delivery.

The exchange previously declared force majeure on Illinois River soy and corn delivery points in June and July due to flooding. The initial June announcement marked the first declaration of force majeure on the river in more than two years.

Reporting for Reuters by Julie Ingwersen in Chicago.

explore

Stories from our other publications