While wheat didn't revise estimates near as much as corn, global projections still rose 0.7 percent to 148.4 million metric tons by the close of the marketing year on May 31, according to the USDA.
Estimates are there will be a surplus of U.S. wheat of 655 million bushels - an increase of 5.1 percent - by May 31. That will be over double the 306 million bushels available last year.
December wheat inventories in the U.S. increased by 26 percent to 1.422 billion bushels on December 1, a 26 percent increase over last year's 1.132 billon bushels.
Wheat futures for March delivery dropped 59.75 cents, or 9.5 percent, to $5.6975. Earlier in the session it dropped to its 60 cents limit.
From September to December, farmers planted 42.098 million acres, down from the 46.281 acres in 2007.
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