uscito la mappazza di dati , oggi si prevede una vola pazzesca in apertura con limit-up diffusi , persino sulla soya

ci sarà da divertirsi con occhio a non bruciarsi le ciapett
in difensiva sugli spread
DJ CBOT Soy Outlook

harply Higher On Bullish USDA Acres Data
By Andrew Johnson Jr.
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
CHICAGO (Dow Jones)--Chicago Board of Trade soybean futures are seen starting
Friday's day session sharply higher, buoyed by a bullishly perceived acreage
estimate from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
CBOT soybean futures are called to start the session 25 to 50 cents higher.
The USDA acreage estimate is simply bullish, coming in well below trade
estimates, said Jack Scoville, analyst with Price Futures Group in Chicago.
Soybeans will be the driver of the market, with this lower-than-expected
acres figure the focal point, a trader said. Longer range outlooks for
tightening supplies and the need to rally prices to levels that will entice
South American producers to increase their plantings to make up for US acreage
declines will be magnified even greater now, he added.
End user and speculative buying should be featured as the market embraces the
prospects of a draw down in inventories with any weather threats heading toward
August expected to entice traders to significantly add risk premium to prices,
analysts said.
USDA reported 2007 soybean acreage at 64.081 million acres, down 15% from
2006's record high. The acreage figure is the lowest planted area since 1995,
with Illinois and Indiana showing the largest decrease in acreage from last
year, down 1.75 million and 1.35 million respectively.
The acres data is also down 3.059 million acres from the March intentions
estimate of 67.140 million, as well as below the average survey estimate of
67.838 million. The figure was also below the low end of trade estimates at 66
million acres.
Meanwhile, June 1 stocks in all positions were reported at a record 1.09
billion bushels, up 10% from June 1 2006. Indicated disappearance during the
March-May period was 696 million bushels, up 3% from last year.
A market technician said no serious chart damage has occurred from the recent
sell-off, but there is the specter of a bear flag or pennant forming on the
daily bar chart. The next upside price objective for November soybeans is
closing prices above solid technical resistance at $8.47 1/2, which would fill
on the upside last week's downside price gap on the daily bar chart. The next
downside price objective is closing prices below solid support at last week's
low of $8.25.
First resistance for November soybeans is seen at $8.47 1/2 and then at
$8.50. First support is seen at Thursday's low of $8.35 1/4 and then at $8.30.
The DTN Meteorlogix Weather Service forecast said hot weather early next week
in the western Midwest is not expected to last long enough to significantly
impact crops. However, the drying trend may continue for the central Minnesota
region. In the eastern Midwest, showers Thursday occurred north of where they
were expected to be in Ohio only. Recent shower activity has helped improve
conditions but more rain will still be needed. The next chance for scattered
thundershowers appears to be next Tuesday night or Wednesday. Only limited hot
weather is seen ahead of this chance, Meteorlogix reports.
In overseas markets, crude palm oil futures on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives
ended higher Friday, boosted by strong gains in soyoil futures and expectations
of a recovery in exports in the coming weeks. The benchmark September contract
settled at MYR2,427 a metric ton, up MYR44 from Thursday.
On Singapore's Joint Asian Derivatives Exchange, CPO futures were higher,
with September up $10.75 at $700.25/ton.
Cash soybean prices in China's major producing regions were lower in the week
ended Friday on tumbling soybean futures prices at CBOT.
Soybean futures traded on the Dalian Commodity Exchange settled higher Friday
on a technical rebound but may resume their fall after consolidation. The
benchmark January 2008 soybean contract settled CNY17 higher at CNY3,229 a
metric ton.