Article content
CHICAGO U.S. corn futures rose on Monday, flirting with multi-year highs set last week, as forecasts for frosty weather and precipitation raised concerns about the pace of planting and germination, analysts said.
Soybeans followed corn higher while wheat was choppy, turning lower at times on profit-taking after reaching a six-week top. A weaker dollar lent support, theoretically making U.S. grains more competitive globally.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or Corn and soy climb on cold U.S. weather outlook and weaker dollar Back to video
As of 1:10 p.m. CDT (1810 GMT), Chicago Board of Trade May corn was up 6-1/4 cents at $5.91-3/4 per bushel, hovering near last week’s high of $6.01-1/2, the highest on a continuous chart of the most-active corn contract since June 2013.
SVEA CONRAD
Special to the Sun
As the holiday season sets its gears firmly into motion, people around the country and the world prepare to celebrate and maintain festive traditions with COVID-19 safety measures dictating new ways of doing so.
And Peter Tchaikovskyâs
The Nutcracker is nothing if not a tradition. Plop the kids (and adults, for that matter) in the car and whisk them off to Ardrey Auditorium to be mesmerized by spinning sugar plum fairies and the fantastical dreams of the famous balletâs protagonist, Clara. Or watch the long-runningÂ
Nutcracker Suite in Modern Bare Feet, a contemporary version that Canyon Dance brings to Flagstaff stages every winter.Â