Overnight, March Corn was down ¼ cent at $3.99 ¾ per bushel. The included chart shows that corn continues to meander in the middle of the trading range between $3.75 and $4.25. As long as prices trade inside of this range, the action to me is just noise. It is when corn prices break out of that range that I want to watch for. Continue to hold the current ratio call spread until then.
Followers of this letter should be long one March Corn ($4.30 strike) call option from 17 ¼ cents and short 2 March Corn ($4.90 strike) call options at 7 3/8 cents each. (As a result of the profit made on the short $3.20 puts, our cost basis of this ratio spread is now a 1 cent credit!)
There are 59 days left until March options expire.
With all the price tests above $4.00 recently, I would hope that the producers have already liquidated most if not all of their corn that needs to be sold.
David Hall
The information and opinions contained herein comes from sources believed to be reliable, but are not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. The risk of loss in trading futures and/or options can be substantial. Each investor must consider whether this is a suitable investment. When trading futures and/or options, it is possible to lose more than the full value of your account. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.
This newsletter is not intended for dissemination to the public without prior approval from David Hall.




