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FINWIRES

US Biofuels Update: Soybean Futures Fall as Iran Conflict Fuels US-China Trade Uncertainty

-- Biofuels feedstock futures closed lower on Monday, as traders became concerned that an escalation in the Strait of Hormuz may impact the US and Chinese planned meeting in May.

The Chicago Board of Trade May soybean futures contract closed 1.15% lower on Monday at $11.62 per bushel, while the CBOT May soybean oil futures contract settled 0.88% lower at 66.50 cents per pound.

On Friday, the May ethanol futures contract on the Nymex ended 0.52% higher at $1.93 per gallon.

Rhett Montgomery, DTN analyst, said soybean futures were pressured by the breakdown of the Iran-US truce, followed by the US conducting a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz.

"The soybean market snapped a three-day win streak to begin the new week, pressured by concerns that the US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz will subsequently sour US-China relations ahead of President Trump's visit scheduled for mid-May," Montgomery stated in a daily note.

On Monday, the US Department of Agriculture's Weekly Export Inspection Report showed that soybean inspections totaled 29.9 mb for the week ending Apr. 9.

Total inspections for 2025-26 are now at 1.158 billion bushels, down 25% from the previous year. USDA is estimating soybean exports to total 1.540 bb in 2025-26, down 18% from the previous year. Soybean inspections are running behind USDA's estimated pace, even as USDA's estimate of soybean ending stocks is 20% above the previous five-year average.

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Market Chatter: Pakistan Turns to Spot LNG Market Amid Supply Crunch

Pakistan has purchased LNG cargo from the spot market for the first time in over two years, as it moves to ease a supply shortfall linked to ongoing conflict in the Middle East, Bloomberg reported on Friday, citing traders familiar with the matter.State-run Pakistan LNG secured a shipment from TotalEnergies (TTE) for delivery April 27-30 through a tender that closed on Friday. The company declined to award two additional cargoes sought in the same tender.Pakistan LNG, TotalEnergies and the Pakistani Ministry of Energy did not immediately reply to a request for comment by.The purchase marks a shift for Pakistan, which has largely relied on long-term contracts, primarily with Qatar, for its LNG needs. The country has not received an LNG shipment since early March following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical transit route for global energy supplies.Bloomberg said ship-tracking data indicate that four Qatari LNG cargoes designated for Pakistan have remained stranded in the Persian Gulf since the conflict began in late February.TotalEnergies reportedly sold the cargo at $18.88 per million British thermal units, more than double the price Pakistan typically pays under its long-term contract with Qatar.Asian LNG spot prices have surged roughly 70% compared with pre-conflict levels, as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted flows representing about one-fifth of global LNG supply, the report said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

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Heidmar Maritime Gets Nasdaq Notice Over Minimum Bid Price

Heidmar Maritime (HMR) said Friday it received a notice from Nasdaq indicating the company is not in compliance with the exchange's minimum bid price requirement after its shares traded below $1 per share for 30 consecutive business days.The company said it has until Oct. 19, 2026, to regain compliance with the requirement.Heidmar said it intends to monitor its share price and consider available options to regain compliance within the allowed timeframe. Its shares will continue to trade on Nasdaq during the grace period and the notice does not affect the company's business operations.Shares of Heidmar Maritime were down 3.6% in after-hours trading.

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