Beans Beware Below

 | Jul 13, 2017 09:32AM ET

There are no “sure things” in the financial markets. There are however, certain “high probability” things. Like for instance, a summer sell off in soybeans (and corn for that matter, but let’s keep it simple and look at beans).

The “typical” pattern for soybeans is that during the winter and early spring months – when there are no actual soybeans planted in the ground in the Midwest and therefore uncertainty is high regarding the current year’s crop – bean prices rise. Then after the expected state of the current year’s crop becomes known in late spring and into summer, bean price fall.

That didn’t happen this year. Like I said, there are no “sure things”.

As you can see in Figure 1 November soybean futures went sideways from December into March and then declined steadily into June, before staging a massive rally in the past two weeks to end up where we would typically expect them to be by early July – i.e., at or near a high or the year.