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Agricultural Seasonality: Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat Calendar Patterns
Corn, soybeans, and wheat follow biological calendars that produce repeatable seasonal windows; learn the four highest-odds trades per grain per year.
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Agricultural Seasonality: Corn, Soybeans, and Wheat Calendar Patterns
Grain markets run on a fixed biological calendar. Planting, pollination, and harvest create recurring supply-and-demand rhythms that produce statistically reliable seasonal windows. The edge isn't in trading every seasonal — it's in stacking the four or five highest-odds windows per year.
Corn (ZC)
- March–May planting rally. Wet or delayed planting pulls yield forecasts; corn historically rises 8–15% from late March to the July WASDE report. Long bias April 1 to June 15.
- July–August pollination risk. Heat above 95°F during pollination cuts yields. This is a volatility event, not a directional bet — own options, not futures.
- September–October harvest low. New supply hits the market; corn typically bottoms late September, down 6–12% from the summer high. Cover longs by October 1.
Soybeans (ZS)
- June–August weather scare. The July–August pod-set window is the most volatile; soybean implied vol jumps from 18% to 35%+. Long straddles entering June capture the move.
- November–January South America flip. Brazilian planting delays lift US beans; the Nov-to-Jan window historically rises 5–9%.
Wheat (ZW)
- January–February freeze risk. Winter wheat in the US Plains and Black Sea can freeze; January longs have worked in 7 of the last 10 years.
- June–July harvest pressure. Wheat drops 5–10% into the US winter wheat harvest; short or stand aside July.
Rules to avoid false seasonals
- Confirm with WASDE and Crop Progress reports — never trade a seasonal blindly against a bearish USDA surprise.
- Require confluence: seasonal window + technical support/resistance + correct carry structure (backwardation for longs).
- Cap risk at 1.5% per seasonal trade; weather can break the pattern any given year.
- Sample size matters. A seasonal that worked 6 of 10 years is barely above random; demand 7 of 10 with a defined fundamental driver.
Skip seasonals during years with structural regime shifts — a 2022-style Black Sea war distorts wheat seasonals beyond use.
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