Agriculture News

The National Weather Service (NWS) 90-day forecast continues to call for increased chances of below-normal precip across most of HRW wheat areas during the January through March period.
As of Dec. 13, 78% of the U.S. was experiencing abnormal dryness/drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, seven points below the peak at the beginning of November.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures traded within narrow ranges in quiet, two-sided price action overnight.
Basis remains above average for both corn and soybeans.
Fed officials projected the federal funds rate will rise to 5.1% by the end of 2023, up from 4.6% projected in September.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures traded solidly lower overnight despite supportive outside markets.
Corn and wheat futures extended Monday’s corrective gains overnight, while the soybean market recouped a small portion of yesterday’s losses.
Weekly export inspections for Dec. 8, revealed corn and wheat on the shallow-end of expectations, while soybeans proved mid-range. Each were notably lower than the previous week’s data.
Short-term trend turns sideways for lean hog futures.
Soybean, soymeal and soyoil futures faced moderate to heavy pressure overnight, while the corn and wheat markets firmed.
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Corn ending stocks landed on the higher end of pre-report expectations due to a reduction in exports, while soybean ending stocks were unchanged. However, corn world ending stocks proved short of pre-report estimates.
USDA made no changes to the soybean or wheat balance sheets this month.
Corn, soybeans and wheat traded mildly higher in light overnight action as traders awaited USDA’s December crop reports later this morning.
Our updated monthly and quarterly price forecasts.
Weekly export sales for week ended Dec. 1 reported soybean sales over 1.7 MMT, topping expectations by over 500,000 MT and were up over 1 MMT from the previous week. Corn landed mid-range at 691,600 MT.
As of Dec. 6, 79% of the U.S. was experiencing abnormal dryness/drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor, down one percentage point from the previous week.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures modestly built on Wednesday’s gains during overnight trade.
Boxed beef and pork cutout prices continued their recent slide.
Soybeans traded higher but within Tuesday’s range, while soymeal futures posted new highs. Wheat futures were supported by mild corrective buying, while corn posted light, two-sided trade overnight.
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