Soybean Crush Margins News Tracker

Track Soybean Crush Margins News

Monitor soybean crush margins across Twitter, Reddit, Telegram, and 10,000+ sources. AI alerts in under 30 seconds.

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Latest Soybean Crush Margins News

About Soybean Crush Margins

The soybean crush spread — the margin between soybean input costs and the combined revenue from soybean meal and soybean oil — is a critical indicator for agricultural processors and renewable fuel producers. Soybean oil has become a premium renewable diesel feedstock, fundamentally changing crush economics. Tracking crush margins, South American harvests, Chinese import demand, and RD plant buildouts is essential for agricultural commodity participants.

How SentryDock tracks Soybean Crush Margins

Source discovery

Tell us what you trade. We find the sources.

Trade copper? We find Chilean mining ministry channels. Natural gas? Russian energy officials. Soybeans? Brazilian agriculture sites.

Add your own sources too. Any public site, Telegram, X, Truth Social, or Reddit.

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We monitor in the original language and translate instantly. Indonesian, Portuguese, Russian, Mandarin. You get a summary in English plus the original source.

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AI impact prediction

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We analyze each story and predict market impact. Is this worth your attention? Which commodities? Bullish or bearish?

Less noise. Only news that could move your positions.

Frequently asked questions about Soybean Crush Margins monitoring

Common questions about tracking soybean crush margins news with SentryDock.

The crush margin measures the gross profit from processing soybeans into meal and oil. Calculated as (soybean meal revenue + soybean oil revenue) minus soybean cost, it drives processor decisions on run rates. Board crush uses futures prices; basis-adjusted crush reflects local physical markets.
Massive renewable diesel capacity buildouts in the US have made soybean oil the preferred feedstock, decoupling its price from traditional food-use fundamentals. Soybean oil now trades at a premium to palm oil driven by RD blending credits (RINs, LCFS) rather than cooking demand alone.
Brazil is the world's largest soybean producer and exporter, harvesting over 150 million metric tonnes annually. Brazilian harvest timing (February-May), logistics bottlenecks at ports like Santos and Paranaguá, and real/dollar exchange rates directly affect global soybean pricing and US export competitiveness.
China imports roughly 60% of globally traded soybeans to crush for meal (pig feed) and oil. Chinese crush margins, hog herd size, and government buying programs are the single largest demand drivers for global soybean prices. Any shift in Chinese import pace moves CBOT futures immediately.