1. At the end of the production line, the corn falls into boxes to await packaging and shipment. 2. Corn fell as a large sale to Egypt failed to convince traders that world demand has returned to normal after record prices this summer stymied export interest. 3. Corn fell as favorable weather forecasts raised expectations for a bumper crop at a time of slow world demand. 4. Corn fell while copper rose. 5. Corn could fall before the start of the December delivery period, as traders sell contracts to remove their obligation to accept unwanted grain. 6. Corn could fall in the days ahead amid persistent concern that global demand is weakening, leaving unwanted supplies on the domestic market. 7. Corn fell as cool, wet weather forecast for the Midwest raised expectations for a bumper crop at a time of slow world demand. 8. Corn fell to a six-week low amid speculation that lighter-than-expected rainfall will enable some farmers to get an early start on the harvest. 9. Corn fell to its lowest price this year after a government report indicated that farmers took advantage of ideal weather conditions to harvest crops last week. 10. Corn fell after those forecasters said the corn harvest would be larger than USDA estimates. |