Farmers Sell Grain as Prices Surge Amid Middle East Conflict

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U.S. farmers are accelerating grain sales after global tensions involving Iran pushed corn, soybean and wheat prices sharply higher in recent days. Futures markets rallied as energy prices climbed and concerns grew about disruptions to fertilizer and fuel supplies tied to the conflict.

Soybean prices reached their highest level since 2024, while corn and wheat also climbed to multi-month highs, prompting many farmers to market crops they had stored during last year’s weak price environment. Major grain traders including ADM and Bunge have increased purchases as elevators across parts of the Midwest see a wave of farmer sales, according to market analysts. Reuters reports higher crop prices have improved short-term cash flow for producers who struggled with declining farm income and rising production costs in recent seasons.

According to Reuters, many ​farmers sold much of ⁠last year’s soybean crop in late 2025, but a large share of corn remained unpriced, so the recent surge could really help corn-heavy operations, said Wesley Davis, partner at Meridian Agribusiness Advisors. As of December 1, growers were storing 14% more corn on farms than a year earlier and 2% more soybeans, U.S. Department of Agriculture ⁠data show.

However, analysts say the rally may offer only temporary relief as farmers continue to face elevated expenses for fertilizer, fuel and seed. The latest surge reflects how geopolitical conflicts can quickly ripple through global agricultural commodity markets.

SOURCE: NAFB News Service and Reuters

 

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