(Bloomberg) -- Wheat in Chicago and Kansas City fell following a stretch of warmer, drier weather that may have curbed development of disease in the U.S. winter crop.
Some areas from Kansas to Ohio, which had as much as four times normal moisture in the past two months, received no rain since May 3, according to data from the National Weather Service. That may have helped slow fungal diseases that thrive in wet conditions.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
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