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Wednesday Corn Market: New Crop Sees Notable Gains Amid Mixed Price Quotes
Wednesday’s midweek trading session delivered a nuanced story in corn futures, with near-term contracts experiencing modest declines while new crop positions staged a notable rally. The divergence between nearby and forward contracts offers traders important signals about market sentiment and supply-demand dynamics heading into spring planting season. Cash corn values, meanwhile, reflected the broader weakness in immediate positions, signaling caution among buyers at current levels.
Futures Prices Show Divergent Work Across Contract Months
In the work of price discovery Wednesday, nearby corn futures finished fractionally lower, with contracts slipping between 1 and 1½ cents per bushel. However, new crop positions demonstrated strength, with December and spring forward contracts gaining 1 to 2¼ cents—a bullish divergence that often precedes shifting market sentiment. The CmdtyView national average cash corn quote settled at $3.94 per bushel, down 1¼ cents, reflecting the pressure on immediate availability.
December futures trading quotes averaged $4.58 during February sessions, compared to $4.70 from the prior year—a softer backdrop as base prices for crop insurance reset for the season. This year-over-year comparison underscores evolving market valuations tied to inventory conditions and forward expectations.
Export Activity and USDA Sales Generate Wednesday Market Interest
Export work continues to shape corn market sentiment. The USDA reported a private export sale of approximately 230,560 metric tons destined for undisclosed buyers, capturing market attention on Wednesday. Looking ahead, traders are positioning for Thursday’s Export Sales report, anticipating sales between 600,000 to 1.1 million metric tons for the 2025/26 crop in the week ending February 5, with 2026/27 sales viewed between zero and 100,000 metric tons during the same period. These export quotes and forward sales expectations remain critical barometers for price direction.
Ethanol Production Bounce Reinforces Corn Demand Outlook
Recent activity in ethanol markets—a key demand outlet for corn—provided another dimension to Wednesday’s trading quotes. Ethanol production surged by 154,000 barrels per day in the week ending February 13, reaching 1.11 million barrels daily. This bounce reflects robust renewable fuel demand. Ethanol inventory levels climbed 111,000 barrels to 25.247 million barrels, while export volumes declined 79,000 barrels per day to 137,000 barrels per day. Refiner inputs increased by 50,000 barrels daily to 841,000 barrels per day, signaling active crushing activity that supports corn utilization.
Key Price Quotes for Corn Futures Traders
For those tracking specific contract quotes: March 2026 corn closed at $4.27½ (down 1¼ cents), May 2026 at $4.36½ (down ¾ cent), and July 2026 at $4.44¼ (down ½ cent). Nearby cash corn settled at $3.94, mirroring the fractional decline observed in futures. These staggered price quotes across the forward curve reflect the market’s ongoing assessment of supply adequacy and demand sustainability as we move deeper into the seasonal calendar.
Wednesday’s work in the corn pits ultimately demonstrated the complexity traders face when interpreting mixed signals from near-term weakness and forward-contract strength. Export expectations, ethanol demand revisions, and insurance pricing reset all converge to shape the ongoing market quotes that drive production and merchandising decisions.