
| Corn (E) (ZCN8) | 591-0 | |
| Corn (E) (ZCU8) | 603-4 | |
| Corn (CN8) | 591-0 | |
| Mini-Sized Corn (YCN8) | 591-0 |
Corn, Soybeans Advance on Concerns of Rain Delaying Planting
Corn and soybeans rallied for the second day amid concerns that planting delays caused by cold, wet weather will reduce crop yields in the U.S. May 08, 2008 3:08AM
Corn Advances as Rains Delay U.S. Planting
Corn advanced on Tuesday following a report that showed that farmers were planting the grain at a slow pace due to excessive rains. May 06, 2008 3:01PM
Corn, Soybean Decline as Dry Weather Boosts Planting
Corn and Soybeans declined on Monday as farmers increased planting of the two crops boosted by average rainfall that brought favorable planting conditions. May 05, 2008 2:37PM
Wheat, oat futures open higher on CBOT; Corn, soybeans fall
Agriculture futures traded mixed Monday on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat for July delivery added 1 cent to $8.10 a bushel; July corn fell 1.5 cents to $6.12 a bushel; July oats rose 5 cents to $4.17 a bushel; July soybeans fell 3.5 cents to $13.01 a bushel. May 05, 2008 11:42AM
Soybeans Decline on Concern of Wet Weather Reducing Planting Corn
Soybeans tumbled on Monday on speculation of cold, wet weather in the U.S. Midwest delaying corn seeding and increase planting of soybeans. Apr 28, 2008 2:42PM
Oil vigilantes are resurfacing in the Nymex oil pits
By Gary DorschIn the futures markets, crude oil is up 80% from a year ago, unleaded gasoline up 40% natural gas up 39%, Soybeans are up 83%, corn up 65%, wheat up 95%, sugar up 30%, Gold up 36%, and rough rice is 125% higher from a year ago Apr 24, 2008 1:08AM
Corn Advances as Wet Weather Delays U.S. Seeding
Corn rallied following a government report that said seeding of grain in the U.S. is slower than expected, and a forecast for wet weather in the main growing region signaled a further delay in planting. Apr 22, 2008 4:27PM
Corn, Soybean Decline as Dry and Warm Weather Boost U.S. Planting
Corn and soybeans declined on concern that drier weather will drain fields in the U.S. Midwest, enabling farmers increase planting of crops. Apr 21, 2008 3:28PM