(Recasts; updates prices, adds analyst comments; changes byline, dateline, previously PARIS/SINGAPORE)
By Michael Hirtzer
CHICAGO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - U.S. grain and oilseed futures were mostly higher on Tuesday, with soybeans Sc1 rebounding from an earlier five-month low on support from investor short-covering ahead of a U.S. Department of Agriculture quarterly stocks report due on Friday.
Rainfall delayed the U.S. corn and soybean harvests, while heavy precipitation could curb wheat output in Australia and reduce grain quality in Canada.
However, global supplies of cereal grains and edible oilseeds were abundant, likely limiting the upside potential in prices, traders and analysts said.
Chicago Board of Trade wheat futures Wc1 posted the largest gains, with December wheat WZ6 jumping 1.8 percent, or 7 cents, to $4.03 per bushel, while MGEX December spring wheat 1MWEZ6 climbed 6 cents to $5.00-1/2 per bushel.
"Wheat overall is up on Australian wheat concerns and spring wheat is up on quality concerns after recent rain events in Canada," said Adam Knosalla, a broker Frontier Futures.
More showers were predicted later this week in eastern Australia after near-record rain earlier in September, and the excess moisture would likely add to crop loss in the part of country that typically produces high-protein wheat. corn and soybean harvests were advancing slightly slower than average, USDA data showed late on Monday, prompting some investors to take profits on bearish bets.
CBOT November soybeans SX6 were up 3-3/4 cents to $9.49 per bushel, rebounding from their session low of $9.34 last reached in April. CBOT December corn CZ6 was 2-3/4 cents higher at $3.31-3/4 per bushel, recovering from a roughly two-week low.
Analysts polled by Reuters expected USDA on Friday to report U.S. stockpiles of wheat, corn and soybeans as of Sept. 1 above levels at the same time in 2015. Feltes, vice president for research at R.J. O'Brien, said early yield results for U.S. soybeans have been impressive.
"On a national basis we are seeing ... very few (anecdotal harvest) yields that are below USDA's number, at 50-plus (bushels per acre)," Feltes said.