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Grain & Livestock Report Market action this week · COT positioning as of Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Ag Optimus · Weekly Positioning

Grain & Livestock Report

Market action this week · COT positioning as of Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Read the timing gap. The COT numbers below are a snapshot of positioning as of the close on Tuesday, July 7, published the following Friday. The market commentary reflects trade since then. When the two disagree, positioning has likely already shifted.
Why we lead with Managed Money. Managed Money is the speculative money — funds and large traders positioning for a price move, not hedging a physical crop. When they crowd to one side, the market gets stretched, and stretched markets move hard when they turn. Commercials tell you where the grain is. Managed Money tells you where the risk is.

Corn CFTC 002602

Firm to higher

The week: Corn was firm to higher into the end of the week, with nearby contracts pushing toward the $5 area in some sessions. Weather risk, including frost concerns, and continued focus on planting progress did the work. Demand stayed mixed: corn used for ethanol slipped slightly week over week even as ethanol inventories rose.
Managed Money — the speculative money
+12,659NET LONG
Week over week  +58,868
52-week rank  17/52
The biggest move on this report. Managed Money flipped from net short to net long in a single week, a swing of nearly 59,000 contracts. That flip lines up with the price strength, and it means the speculative short that had been sitting on this market is largely gone. Producers used the rally to add hedges, pushing their net short deeper by almost 50,000.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -351,677 -49,866 39
Swap Dealer +345,852 +6,277 7
Managed Money +12,659 +58,868 17
Other Reportable +16,940 -12,933 31
Non-Reportable -23,774 -2,346 21
What it means for the producer: The short that was capping corn rallies has been covered, which removes one source of overhead pressure. But notice what your peers did: producers sold into this strength, adding almost 50,000 contracts of hedges. That is the whole signal. If this rally has put a profitable new-crop price in front of you, other growers are already acting on it. Check the number against your break-even rather than waiting to see how much further it runs.

Soybeans CFTC 005602

Mixed to higher

The week: Soybeans were mixed to modestly higher, generally following corn but with more subdued upside. Beans firmed toward the low-$12 area late in the week as the market weighed weather and planting against softer export and crush signals. Export sales were noted at a marketing-year low as seasonal demand eased.
Managed Money — the speculative money
+68,679NET LONG
Week over week  +37,479
52-week rank  29/52
Managed Money added strongly to its net long, up more than 37,000 contracts on the week. Producers met that with heavier hedging, deepening their net short by nearly 40,000. Swap dealers have been trimming their net long over the month. The speculative bid is real, but commercials are selling into it.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -165,163 -39,735 22
Swap Dealer +107,965 -9,495 33
Managed Money +68,679 +37,479 29
Other Reportable +18,577 +8,167 22
Non-Reportable -30,057 +3,587 33
What it means for the producer: Beans are riding a speculative bid while the demand side softens — export sales at a marketing-year low is not a small detail. Producers are hedging into this strength for a reason. Beans lean on demand headlines more than corn does, so before you count on follow-through here, ask what would have to happen on exports or biofuel policy to sustain it. If the answer is “a lot,” treat strength as a pricing window.

Wheat CFTC 001612

Volatile, strong

The week: Wheat was volatile but generally strong, with Kansas City contracts posting sizeable daily gains. Drought drove it — a large share of the U.S. winter wheat crop remained in drought, with some regional improvement but worsening conditions in parts of the central Plains. Strong global competition continues to cap rallies even when domestic weather supports them.
Managed Money — the speculative money
+11,764NET LONG
Week over week  +4,854
52-week rank  11/52
Managed Money has rebuilt a net long, adding nearly 5,000 contracts, and sits at a 52-week rank of 11 — a relatively fresh, uncrowded long with room to grow. Swap dealers are heavily net long at rank 6. The one to watch: Other Reportables sit at a bearish extreme, rank 47.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -68,642 -7,194 37
Swap Dealer +77,797 +1,700 6
Managed Money +11,764 +4,854 11
Other Reportable -18,068 -84 47
Non-Reportable -2,852 +722 38
What it means for the producer: A fresh, uncrowded spec long has room to grow, which is different from a crowded one that has to unwind. The drought story is real. But the ceiling on this market is not domestic weather — it is global competition, and that has not changed. Wheat rallies keep running into export competition that caps them. Treat strength as an opportunity to price, not as the start of a trend, unless the global supply picture actually tightens.

Live Cattle CFTC 057642

Softer, defensive

The week: Cattle ran the other way from grains, trading softer for much of the week. The market waited on more widespread cash trade and reacted to slaughter totals a little lower than both the prior week and last year. A broader risk-off tone and earlier cash weakness kept cattle choppy and defensive.
Managed Money — the speculative money
+113,321NET LONG
Week over week  -5,982
52-week rank  34/52
Still heavily net long — over 113,000 contracts — but cutting it for two straight weeks. That is the number to respect here. A crowded long that starts unwinding into a soft cash market is the setup for further liquidation. Producers are becoming less net short; swap dealers are slowly adding.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -158,986 +6,335 20
Swap Dealer +56,560 +1,166 19
Managed Money +113,321 -5,982 34
Other Reportable +8,270 -1,150 47
Non-Reportable -19,166 -369 3
What it means for the producer: This is the one to watch if you have fed cattle to market. A large speculative long that is already being cut, into a cash market that has not confirmed, is how a soft market becomes a sharply lower one. It does not have to play out that way. But if your close-out window is near, the risk of waiting is not symmetrical right now. Know where your breakeven sits and what a further move down would do to it.

Feeder Cattle CFTC 061641

Choppy

The week: Feeders closed lower on days when corn and soybeans finished higher — they did not follow the grain markets up. Firmer feed grains and a defensive cattle tone are working against feeder bids at the same time.
Managed Money — the speculative money  52-WEEK EXTREME
+13,690NET LONG
Week over week  -1,374
52-week rank  47/52
Net long, but at a 52-week rank of 47 — a crowded position — and trimmed slightly on the week. Swap dealers sit at rank 1, the most extreme bullish reading in the report. Other Reportables are at rank 50. Positioning is stretched on both sides here, which is how sharp two-way moves happen.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -8,682 +33 13
Swap Dealer +6,116 +341 1
Managed Money +13,690 -1,374 47
Other Reportable -4,827 -89 50
Non-Reportable -6,297 +1,090 5
What it means for the producer: If you buy feeders, the squeeze is coming from both ends: corn firmed this week, and the cattle board is defensive. Higher feed in, softer cattle out, is the worst combination for the feeding margin, and it is exactly what this week delivered. Watch corn direction as closely as you watch the feeder board — for a feeding operation, they are the same decision. Positioning this stretched also means expect big intraday ranges rather than a smooth trend.

Lean Hogs CFTC 054642

Crowded short

The week: Hogs stayed under technical pressure, with fund liquidation after earlier rallies and mixed demand signals. Wholesale pork values and export demand remain the swing factors.
Managed Money — the speculative money  52-WEEK EXTREME
-29,002NET SHORT
Week over week  -1,635
52-week rank  52/52
The single most extreme reading on this report. Managed Money is net short 29,002 at a 52-week rank of 52 — the most crowded short position in a year — and it is still adding. Producers and swap dealers sit on the other side at bullish extremes (ranks 2 and 7). A crowded short against commercial support is the classic squeeze setup.
Full positioning breakdown
Category Net WoW Δ 52W rank
Producer / Merchant -43,219 +3,196 2
Swap Dealer +73,128 -1,011 7
Managed Money -29,002 -1,635 52
Other Reportable -3,136 -533 51
Non-Reportable +2,230 -16 2
What it means for the producer: Crowded positioning does not tell you which way the market goes next. What it tells you is how the market will behave if it turns. A short this crowded means that if hogs find a bid, the covering can be fast and violent, and moves like that run further than the fundamentals justify. If you have hogs to price, that cuts both ways: the downside pressure is real right now, but so is the risk of being caught chasing a squeeze. Size any decision so that a sharp move in either direction does not force your hand.

The bigger picture

The positioning confirms what the price action showed. Corn is the headline: Managed Money flipped from net short to net long in one week, a swing of nearly 59,000 contracts, and producers used that strength to add hedges. The speculative short that was capping corn is gone. Wheat shows a fresh, uncrowded spec long building on the drought story.

Cattle is the mirror image. Managed Money remains heavily net long in live cattle but has been cutting that long two weeks running, into a soft cash market. That is long liquidation, and it explains why cattle would not follow grains higher. Feeders are stretched on both sides of the book, with firmer feed grains squeezing the margin from the other end.

Lean hogs hold the single most extreme reading: Managed Money net short at a 52-week rank of 52, still adding, against commercial longs. Crowded positioning does not predict direction. It tells you how the market may behave when direction changes.

None of this prices your grain or sells your cattle — your breakeven, your basis, and your own marketing plan do.

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Positioning data is from the CFTC Commitments of Traders report for the week ended Tuesday, July 7, 2026. Market commentary reflects publicly reported trade and is drawn from public industry sources; verify all price levels against your own quote provider. This material is provided for general information and is the opinion of Ag Optimus. Trading futures, options, and swaps involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.