
“It is as much the logistical flows as the balance sheets that are currently driving the markets,” Paris-based adviser Agritel said in a note.
Corn futures on the Chicago Board of Trade rose as much as 0.9% to $8.14 a bushel, their highest since September 2012, before paring gains to trade slightly lower.
Ukraine is ramping up crop shipments by rail given that most of its seaports are closed. Still, cars are facing multiweek logjams at the border as the infrastructure isn’t sufficient for the increase in traffic, according to analyst UkrAgroConsult.
Moreover, a third of the country’s farmland could go unharvested or unsown this year amid the war, the United Nations estimates.
Wheat futures on the Chicago exchange also eased near a recent peak, while the Paris contract climbed 1.1% to 406.50 euros ($438.76) per ton. That’s near its all-time high set in early March.
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