Iran strikes Kuwait airport; WTI tops $96 on third day of rally; Logan calls for rate hike; gold and copper retreat

Iran strikes Kuwait airport; WTI tops $96 on third day of rally; Logan calls for rate hike; gold and copper retreat

Wednesday's June 3 session was defined by a severe widening of the Iran conflict's geographic scope — an IRGC drone-and-missile strike on Kuwait International Airport killed one person and wounded 63+ others, while a simultaneous salvo targeting the US Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain was intercepted. WTI CLN6 settled at $96.02/bbl (+2.41%), completing a three-session +9.91% rally and pushing $100 into view. Three simultaneous macro data prints (ADP +122K, ISM Services PMI 54.5 with prices-paid at a four-year high, Fed Beige Book flagging energy-driven inflation) and Dallas Fed President Logan's explicit rate-hike call sent gold down 1.29% to $4,461.70 (August active) and COMEX copper retreating 2.53% from Tuesday's all-time record of $6.6765. Grains fell for a fourth session, unmoved by oil's rally, as favorable crop weather and continued absence of USDA-confirmed China purchases kept bears in control. The S&P 500 ended its nine-session winning streak.

Commodity Price Movement Recap
2026. 6. 4. · 06:35
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 14개
Wednesday's session delivered a severe test of the market's Iran-deal optimism — and the optimism failed it. An Iranian drone-and-missile strike on Kuwait International Airport killed one person and wounded at least 63 others in a direct hit on civilian infrastructure, while a simultaneous salvo of three ballistic missiles targeting the US Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain was intercepted by joint US-Bahraini defenses. 1 2 CENTCOM acknowledged a retaliatory US strike on an Iranian command-and-control facility on Qeshm Island. 3 The same morning, Trump told a podcast audience that Iran had "already agreed they're not going to have a nuclear weapon." 4 The gap between the White House's diplomatic framing and the battlefield reality is now as wide as it has been since the conflict began.
NYMEX WTI (CLN6) settled at $96.02/bbl (+2.41%), its highest close since May 22, completing a three-session rally of +$8.66 (+9.91%) — the largest three-day dollar gain since April 30. 5 ICE Brent (BRNQ26) settled at $97.81/bbl (+1.89%). 6 Meanwhile, three simultaneous macro data releases — ADP employment beating consensus, ISM Services PMI printing its highest prices-paid reading since August 2022, and a hawkish Fed Beige Book — combined with Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan's explicit call for a rate hike to pin gold at $4,436.70/oz (−1.17%) and drag copper 2.53% lower from Tuesday's all-time record of $6.6765. 7 8 Grains fell for a fourth session, immune to crude's rally: CBOT corn lost 2.21% and soybeans 1.01%, with favorable crop weather and persistent fund liquidation holding the bears in control. 9 The S&P 500 snapped its nine-session winning streak, closing at 7,553.68 (−0.74%). 10

Settlement snapshot — June 3 vs. June 2

ContractSettlementChange% ChangeJune 2 close
NYMEX WTI Jul (CLN6)$96.02/bbl+$2.26+2.41%$93.76
ICE Brent Aug (BRNQ26)$97.81/bbl+$1.81+1.89%~$96.00
COMEX Gold Jun (GCM6)$4,436.70/oz−$52.40−1.17%~$4,489.10
COMEX Gold Aug active (GCQ6)$4,461.70/oz−$58.20−1.29%$4,519.90
CBOT Corn Jul (ZCN6 / C00)431.50¢/bu−9.75¢−2.21%440.50¢
CBOT Soybeans Jul (ZSN6 / S00)1,154.00¢/bu−11.75¢−1.01%1,165.25¢
COMEX Copper Jul (HGN6)$6.4810/lb−16.85¢−2.53%$6.6765 (ATH)
Sources: 5 6 7 8 9 11 12

Crude oil: Kuwait attack collapses ceasefire premium; EIA logs sixth straight draw

What the Kuwait strike changed

Until Wednesday morning, the market had treated Iran's military activity as primarily directed at shipping in and around the Strait of Hormuz. The Kuwait International Airport strike — an IRGC drone-and-missile salvo that killed one person, an Indian national, and wounded at least 63 others including passengers in Terminal 1 — escalated the conflict's geographic perimeter to allied civilian infrastructure on the Arabian Peninsula. 1 2 Kuwait's defense ministry said its forces intercepted and destroyed more than a dozen Iranian missiles and a similar number of drones. 2 Kuwait expelled two Iranian diplomats. 1
The simultaneous Bahrain salvo targeted the US Fifth Fleet's air and naval base. American and Bahraini defenses intercepted all three ballistic missiles. CENTCOM said in a statement: "All Iranian attacks on American forces failed." 3 The US then struck a military ground control station on Qeshm Island — Iran claimed the target was a communications tower. 13 The UAE issued a statement strongly condemning the Bahrain attack; Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince office chief posted: "O God, protect our people in Kuwait and Bahrain and safeguard our Gulf from all evil." 2
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Against this backdrop, Trump told the New York Post's "Pod Force One" podcast that Iran had "already agreed they're not going to have a nuclear weapon" and that he hoped to meet new Supreme Leader Mujtaba Khamenei. 4 He added that the US naval blockade of Hormuz "could be" maintained through Labor Day (September 7) but said "I think it's unlikely. I think this will resolve itself fairly quickly." 4 An unnamed Iranian government official told CNBC that Trump's nuclear comment was "misleading," noting that Iran has long been an NPT member and its nuclear program "has always been exclusively peaceful." 4
Analysts were direct about the divergence. Ritterbusch and Associates wrote in their Wednesday morning note that the latest round of attacks had made any ceasefire "almost irrelevant" and that a high-oil-price summer was increasingly likely, "especially given Trump's latest comments that the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz could continue to Labor Day." 14 FxPro chief market analyst Alex Kuptsikevich put it plainly: "Investors are growing increasingly weary of the White House's promises of an imminent deal with Iran." 14
Robert Yawger (Mizuho) laid out the path to three digits: "If the violence in the Middle East continues to increase and the timeline on a ceasefire agreement continues to expand further into the future, then eventually the market is going to trade through $100 sooner rather than later." 15

EIA: sixth consecutive weekly crude draw, SPR at multi-year low

The EIA weekly petroleum status report (covering the week ending May 29) confirmed the inventory trajectory that underpins the bull case for crude. 16
EIA data pointWeek ending May 29Prior week
US commercial crude inventories433.7M bbl (−8.0M bbl)441.7M bbl
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)357.1M bbl (−8.0M bbl)365.1M bbl
Combined commercial + SPR draw−16.0M bbl
Refinery utilization rate94.7%~93.5%
Refinery crude inputs~17.0M bbl/day (+652K bbl/day)
Implied product demand (4-wk avg)20.2M bbl/day (+1.5% YoY)
Crude imports5.2M bbl/day (−804K bbl/day)
Sources: 16 17
The combined 16 million barrel single-week draw — commercial and SPR together — is among the steepest on record. Matt Smith (Kpler, US chief analyst) noted that strong US crude exports alongside rising refinery utilization were the primary drivers. 18 David Russell (TradeStation global head of market strategy) noted the structural limits of the SPR cushion: "Energy isn't very nimble. Rather, it's a long-term structural industry that relies on key facilities to ensure steady flow, which means that the longer Persian Gulf supplies are disrupted, the harder it gets to smooth over with excess inventories and SPR drawdowns." 16
Macquarie's global economics team estimated that with Hormuz effectively closed for three months, global daily oil supply has been reduced by roughly 14% — in the bank's assessment, the largest supply reduction in history. 16 Global inventories have drawn at roughly 5 million barrels per day over the past month; if that pace holds, stocks could return to 2025 lows by early July and approach 2022 lows by early August.

Hormuz maritime: 55 VLCCs waiting, tanker rates at $424K/day record

A covert US military coordination program — vessels sailing with AIS transponders off, hugging the Omani coastline to avoid Iranian mines — is the primary mechanism through which the limited commercial transit continues. 19 CENTCOM Capt. Tim Hawkins acknowledged the outlines of the effort: "Though US forces are not escorting, we continue to communicate and coordinate with commercial ships seeking to freely and safely transit the Strait of Hormuz." 19 On Wednesday morning, just two inbound commercial vessels were observed transiting.
About 55 VLCCs (very large crude carriers, each typically carrying 2 million barrels) are waiting outside the Persian Gulf according to Frontline's estimates, with at least six Saudi Bahri supertankers stranded for more than a month. 20 Tanker day rates have reached $424,000/day — a new record — with war-risk premiums exceeding 5% of hull value. 20 Shipping industry executives at the Posidonia conference said that even a ceasefire agreement would not immediately bring ships back without a clear framework for demining, rules of engagement, and insurance coverage. Heidmar Maritime president Pankaj Khanna: "What we need is obviously a framework, a rules regulation, whatever tells us exactly how we can go in and get out." 21
OPEC+ is scheduled to meet Saturday June 7 and is widely expected to confirm another 188,000 bbl/day July output increase — the same increment approved for June. 14 Saudi Aramco's July official selling price is due around June 5. CENTCOM also reported that on June 2, US forces used Hellfire missiles to disable the Botswanan-flagged tanker M/T Lexie as it attempted to reach Iran's Kharg Island — the sixth vessel disabled and the 122nd diverted since the blockade began in April. 3

Gold: three macro catalysts and Logan's rate-hike call send price to March lows

COMEX gold (June contract GCM6) settled at $4,436.70/oz, the lowest settlement since March 26. The active August contract (GCQ6) closed at $4,461.70, down $58.20 (−1.29%) from Tuesday's $4,519.90. 7 11 COMEX silver fell further: June silver settled at $73.476/oz (−2.44%), with spot silver down to approximately $72.755. The session's intraday gold low was $4,426.42, reached just after the US equity open.
Three macro data points landed in a tight window before midday, each reinforcing the same message for gold: the Fed has less room to cut, not more.
ADP May employment (8:15 AM ET): Private payrolls rose 122,000, ahead of the Dow Jones consensus of 110,000 and the strongest monthly reading since January 2025. 22 The April figure was revised down to 105,000 from the initial 109,000. Hiring was broad-based across 8 of 10 major industries. ADP chief economist Nela Richardson: "Hiring was more broad-based in May than we've seen in the last few years. The labor market continues to show sustained momentum going into the summer hiring season." 22
ISM Services PMI (10:00 AM ET): The index came in at 54.5 in May, beating the consensus of 53.8 and up from April's 53.6 — the 23rd consecutive month in expansion territory. 23 The prices-paid component hit 71.3 — the highest since August 2022 (72.6) — with ISM's Steve Miller noting that "petroleum-related products were mentioned as a commodity up in price, a dynamic panelists had not yet reported in April." 23 Business activity rose to 57.7 and new orders to 57.3, while the employment index slipped to 47.9 — its third consecutive month in contraction.
Fed Beige Book (2:00 PM ET): The Federal Reserve's survey of regional business conditions found that economic activity grew at a "slight to moderate" pace in 10 of 12 districts. 24 The report named energy costs tied to the Middle East conflict as "the primary driver of inflationary pressures, with spillovers into shipping, packaging, groceries, and fertilizer." 24 A Kansas City Fed contact captured the consumer squeeze in one sentence: "Middle-income households are squeezing more life out of every dollar before deciding to spend it." 24 One-third of Minneapolis Fed-surveyed businesses raised prices in April; a quarter reported non-labor input costs up more than 5% over the previous two months.
The day's most significant Fed signal came after the bell. Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan — one of three FOMC members who dissented at the last meeting in favor of a more hawkish signal — spoke in El Paso and put her position directly: "I am increasingly concerned that higher interest rates could be necessary later this year to fully restore price stability and appropriately balance both sides of the Fed's dual mandate." 25 She added: "These conditions indicate that monetary policy is not restraining the economy." 25 The remarks came 13 days before Chair Warsh's first FOMC meeting, scheduled for June 16-17.
The cross-asset transmission was direct: crude's 2.4% gain pushed inflation expectations higher, the DXY rose to 99.53 (+0.31%) — a 1.75-month high — the 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.491% (+3.6 bps), and gold surrendered its safe-haven premium to the dollar and rates headwinds. 26 27
Fawad Razaqzada (Forex.com) identified the downside scenario for gold: "If more evidence of economic resilience emerges this week, or we see increased tensions and oil prices go even higher, gold could drop towards the $4,000 area." 14 The technical picture confirms the caution: Kitco's PM Report put key support at $4,426 → $4,400 → $4,367; a break below $4,366 (the session's prior hammer-candle low) would, per Razaqzada, open a path to the March low near $4,100. 28
Julius Baer's Carsten Menke maintained the structural bull case despite the session's damage: "We still see central-bank buying as the strongest structural force in the gold market and expect Western-world investment demand to pick up again." 14 That thesis faces a near-term test: Friday's BLS nonfarm payrolls report (consensus: +80,000) and any additional Iran-related oil price moves will determine whether the June 16-17 FOMC rates decision is live for a hike.
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Copper: record high gives way to -2.53% reversal as dollar surges

COMEX Copper (July contract HGN6) settled at $6.4810/lb, down 16.85¢ (−2.53%) from Tuesday's all-time record close of $6.6495 — the largest one-day decline since May 15. 8 The continuous contract (HG00) opened near the record at $6.6820 before selling accelerated mid-session; it closed at $6.4820. 12 LME copper fell 0.7% to $13,879/mt. Wednesday's settlement is still the sixth-highest COMEX closing price in 2026 and puts year-to-date gains at +15.12% from the January low.
The proximate driver was the DXY's move to a 1.75-month high: a stronger dollar mechanically compresses dollar-denominated metal prices, particularly for an instrument that had already stretched to an all-time record. The structural thesis — a Macquarie / Morgan Stanley projected 600,000-tonne 2026 refined copper deficit, LME warehouse stocks at 1974-era lows, TC/RC (treatment and refining charges at major smelters) below −$100/tonne — has not changed. What changed Wednesday was the macro overlay.
One forward-looking item: CopperTech Metals (a Vedanta Resources subsidiary holding 79.42% of Zambia's Konkola Copper Mines) filed for a NYSE IPO on June 2, targeting approximately $500 million in proceeds. 29 Its year ending March 31, 2026, net sales reached $1.33 billion, up from $398 million the prior year — a 234% rise tracking directly with COMEX copper's 2025-2026 surge. 29 The company plans $2.7 billion in capex over fiscal years 2027-2031 to reach 270,000 tonnes per year of annual production capacity. Also looming: the Section 232 tariff amendment signed in April takes effect June 8, adjusting rates on copper derivative imports for the remainder of 2026. 14

Grains: crude's near-$100 surge does nothing for corn or soybeans

CBOT July corn (ZCN6) settled at 431.50¢/bu (−9.75¢, −2.21%), approaching the contract low and well below the $5.06 high hit in late May. 9 30 CBOT July soybeans (ZSN6) settled at 1,154.00¢/bu (−11.75¢, −1.01%). 31 CBOT July SRW wheat fell 2.7% to 586.75¢/bu; Kansas City July HRW wheat extended its decline to a tenth consecutive session. December corn — the new-crop contract — hit its lowest level since February. CmdtyView's national average cash corn: $3.97/bu, down 7.5¢.
The disconnect from oil is intentional, not an anomaly. StoneX analyst Matt Zeller explained: "The grains and oilseeds remain under fundamental pressure thanks to a mostly solid start to the 2026 growing season, and widespread rains on the way over the next week or so." 9 AgMarket.net's Matt Bennett framed the failure of the oil rally to transmit: "A rallying crude oil market hasn't stopped the bleeding on our commodity markets." 9 Fund managers are still liquidating accumulated long positions; AgResource noted that "stale longs continue to be liquidated." 9

Crop conditions: 67% G/E corn — three-year low debut — with rains incoming

USDA's first 2026 crop progress ratings (through May 31) showed corn at 67% good/excellent — below the analyst estimate of 70% and the year-ago 69%, making it the lowest initial corn rating in three years and the third-lowest initial debut in 13 years. 32 The Brugler500 composite index (a weighted condition score from 0-500) printed at 371, with Ohio the weakest state at 340 and Iowa the strongest at 399. Soybeans rated 66% G/E. Corn planting reached 93% nationally (one percentage point ahead of the five-year average); emergence at 76% (two points ahead of average). 33
NOAA's seven-day forecast calls for widespread 0.5-to-1-inch rainfall across the western Corn Belt, and DTN confirmed that "Central US Picking Up More Rainfall Through Next Week" — which is the fundamental reason the below-expectations crop ratings did not trigger a buying response. Brian Hoops (Midwest Market Solutions): "Crop conditions across much of the country are limiting rally attempts." 33

Vaden's China signal: a verbal cue, not a USDA-confirmed purchase

USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden told the WSJ Global Food Forum on Wednesday that China has "started placing orders for soybeans that are being planted right now across the U.S." and that the US expects China to honor its commitment to purchase 25 million metric tonnes (MMT) of 2026 new-crop soybeans. 34 35 China committed to the 25 MMT target last fall, compared to the roughly 12 MMT it bought from the 2025 crop (versus a typical 25-30 MMT per year).
The market did not move on the statement, and the reason is straightforward. As of June 3, USDA's daily export sales flash announcements show no China soybean purchases. China has gone 112+ consecutive days without a USDA-reported large soybean purchase. 35 Allendale analyst Greg McBride acknowledged Vaden's words but noted: "It is good to hear that [China] is buying, if that's true." He explained the verification lag: "A lot of times what we're looking for is flash sales that come out at 8 in the morning Monday through Friday. Or we're looking for that to show up in the weekly export sales report. If it happened since last Thursday, we won't see it until next week." 35 Jim Wiesemeyer (Ag Bull Trading): "The U.S. grain market won't be convinced until the USDA's weekly export sales reports start to show China making sizable purchases." 9
USDA confirmed a separate sale on Wednesday: 136,000 metric tonnes of 2026/27 corn sold to South Korea. 36

EIA ethanol: production 1.108M bpd, stocks fall 362K barrels

The EIA's weekly ethanol data (week ending May 29) showed US fuel ethanol production at 1.108 million barrels per day (+19,000 bpd week-on-week), the upper end of the analyst survey range of 1.056-1.12M bpd. 37 Ethanol stocks fell 362,000 barrels to 24.606 million barrels (−1.5% week-on-week, +0.7% year-on-year). Blending demand was 899,000 bpd (−38,000 bpd from the prior week). 37 The production reading doesn't resolve the broader corn-for-ethanol shortfall: StoneX had estimated that program is tracking 50-75 million bushels behind the USDA's pace target for the marketing year.

New World Screwworm suspected in South Texas

USDA reported Wednesday afternoon that a possible New World Screwworm (NWS) case was identified near La Pryor in south Texas — the first potential US detection of the parasite in over 60 years. 38 Samples were sent to the USDA National Veterinary Services Laboratories in Ames, Iowa, for confirmation. The announcement immediately drove feeder cattle futures down more than $5/cwt. 36 USDA Deputy Secretary Dudley Hoskins clarified: "The screwworm is not contagious. It does not spread directly from animals to people or from person to person. And the screwworm does not pose a food safety risk." 38 Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association president Stephen Diebel echoed the message: "This is certainly considered a pest that we are trying to control, not a consumer safety issue at all." 38
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Macro and cross-asset dashboard — June 3

IndicatorReadingChangePrior session
ADP May payrolls+122,000Beat vs. +110K consensusApril: +105K (revised)
ISM Services PMI (May)54.5+0.9 pts53.6 (Apr)
ISM Prices Paid71.3+1.4 pts69.9 (Apr); highest since Aug 2022
Fed Beige BookInflation widespreadEnergy costs primary driver
Dallas Fed Logan speechRate hike may be neededFOMC dissenter, El Paso
DXY99.53+0.31%99.22
10Y Treasury yield4.491%+3.6 bps4.455%
2Y Treasury yield4.084%
30Y Treasury yield4.989%
S&P 5007,553.68−0.74%7,609.78 (9-session ATH)
Dow Jones Industrial Average50,687.07−1.21%
Nasdaq Composite26,853.98−0.89%
Russell 2000~2,893.50−1.3%
VIX~16.07+1.9%
Fed funds rate (current)3.50%–3.75%Unchanged
Next FOMCJune 16-17Warsh's first
Sources: 22 23 24 25 26 27 10
The session's cross-asset logic was consistent: oil prices above $95 drove inflation expectations higher, pushed yields and the dollar up, and those two channels together outweighed geopolitical safe-haven buying for gold. Equities fell hardest in small caps and fuel-sensitive sectors. The three-session WTI rally of nearly 10% has done what the February-May plateau could not — it revived the market's debate about whether the Fed's next move is a cut or a hike.
Logan's speech crystallized where that debate stands heading into the June 16-17 meeting. She argued that AI-driven investment demand is running hot, consumer spending is firm, and financial conditions are loose — none of which is consistent with a rate policy that is "restraining the economy." 25 With Hammack having made a similar case on June 2, Logan on June 3, and the Beige Book now providing regional business corroboration, the "hike is the next move" thesis has three consecutive data points behind it going into Friday's BLS nonfarm payrolls report (consensus: +80,000, unemployment rate 4.3%).
Swissquote senior analyst Ipek Ozkardeskaya had flagged the threshold before Wednesday's data: "The barrel of U.S. crude is pushing above the $95-per-barrel mark this morning, keeping investors alert to another wave of higher oil prices that could revive inflation worries and trigger a selloff across global bond markets." 14 Oil crossed that threshold and held. Gold fell through $4,440. The bond market absorbed the move without a broad selloff, but the 30-year yield's proximity to 5% — and the July-August inventory cliff that Macquarie has quantified — means the pressure points for the summer are already in view.
Cover photo: aerial view of oil tanker at sea — Pexels

참고 출처

  1. 1NPR/AP: Iran strikes Kuwait's main airport, killing 1
  2. 2Arab News: Kuwait says one killed in Iranian missile, drone attack
  3. 3JNS: US forces down Iranian missiles and drones across Gulf region
  4. 4CNBC: Trump says Iran agreed to not have nuclear weapons
  5. 5Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Front Month Nymex Crude Rose 2.41% to Settle at $96.02
  6. 6Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Front Month ICE Brent Crude Rose 1.89% to Settle at $97.81
  7. 7Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Comex Gold Settles 1.17% Lower at $4,436.70
  8. 8Dow Jones Market Data via Morningstar: Comex Copper Settles 2.53% Lower at $6.4810
  9. 9Dow Jones/WSJ via Morningstar: Wheat Futures Lower as Traders Duck Out of Long Positions — Daily Grain Highlights
  10. 10MarketWatch: SPX — S&P 500 Index Overview
  11. 11MarketWatch: GC00 Gold Continuous Contract
  12. 12MarketWatch: HG00 Copper Continuous Contract
  13. 13Al Jazeera: Iran, Kuwait, Bahrain hit
  14. 14Dow Jones Newswires via Morningstar: Commodities Roundup
  15. 15WSJ: Oil Settles Higher as U.S.-Iran Exchanges Increase Tension
  16. 16MarketWatch: Oil settles at highest price in over a week
  17. 17IndexBox: EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report
  18. 18MarketWatch
  19. 19gCaptain/Bloomberg: U.S. Looks to Unblock Hormuz With Quiet Version of Project Freedom
  20. 20gCaptain/Bloomberg: Tankers Gather Outside Persian Gulf in Wager on Hormuz Reopening
  21. 21gCaptain: Shipping Industry Says Hormuz Peace Deal Alone Won't Bring Ships Back
  22. 22CNBC: ADP jobs report May 2026: Payrolls increase by 122,000
  23. 23Kitco: Gold off session lows after ISM Services PMI rises to 54.5 in May
  24. 24Reuters via Kitco: US consumers, businesses squeezed by inflation, Fed survey shows
  25. 25Reuters via Kitco: Fed's Logan says a rate hike may be needed to beat inflation
  26. 26MarketWatch: DXY U.S. Dollar Index
  27. 27Dow Jones via Morningstar: 10-Year Treasury Yield Rises to 4.491%
  28. 28Kitco PM Report: Gold breaks $4,440 as U.S.-Iran fighting pressures markets
  29. 29Bloomberg via Mining.com: CopperTech Metals reports revenue surge in US IPO filing
  30. 30MarketWatch: C00 Corn Continuous Contract
  31. 31MarketWatch: S00 Soybeans Continuous Contract
  32. 32Barchart/TradingView: Corn Starting Wednesday with a Modest Correction
  33. 33RFD-TV: Grain Markets Weigh Middle East Tensions, Crop Conditions, and Trade Outlook
  34. 34Farm Policy News/University of Illinois: China Placing New US Soybean Orders, USDA's Vaden Says
  35. 35Brownfield Ag News: USDA's Vaden indicates China is buying new crop soybeans from U.S.
  36. 36DTN Progressive Farmer: Periodic Updates on the Grains, Livestock Futures Markets
  37. 37DTN Progressive Farmer: EIA: US Ethanol Inventories Fall 1.5%; Up 0.7% on Year
  38. 38AgWeb/Farm Journal: Breaking: New World Screwworm Might Have Been Detected in South Texas

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