BEIJING — Chicago soybean futures inched higher on Monday, supported in part by gains in soyoil prices after a US strike on Iranian nuclear facilities stoked concerns of global crude oil supplies.
The most-active soybean contract rose 0.09 percent to $10.61-6/8 per bushel. Soyoil climbed 1.14 percent to 55.09 cents per pound.
Oil prices surged after the US targeted key Iranian nuclear sites over the weekend, an escalation that lent support to soyoil, which is closely tied to biofuel demand.
“Fundamentally, not much has changed since the end of the week,” said Andrew Whitelaw, agricultural consultant at Episode 3. “Speculators pulled back their net short positions, which is not surprising, considering the uncertainty about the attacks on Iran by Israel, and now the US”
Traders and analysts are closely watching for Iran’s response to the US strikes.
“The concern will now be about retaliation from Iran, and its proxies in the region. If there are concerns to supply chains, this could caUe the market to rally further as crude oil prices rise,” Whitelaw added.
US soybean prices remain under pressure due to weak demand and ample global supplies.
In top buyer China, soybean imports from Brazil surged 37.5 percent last month from a year earlier, data showed on Friday, as buyers scooped up South America’s bumper crop, while supplies from the United States also rose 28.3 percent.
Wheat Wv1 traded flat at $5.83 a bushel, after last week’s strong rally. Gains were capped by harvest pressure, as the accelerating US winter wheat harvest increases supply.
Corn Cv1 slipped 0.41 percent to $4.27 per bushel, marking its lowest level of 2025. Favorable weather across much of the US Midwest has improved crop prospects, putting pressure on prices.