Agriculture News

Find expectations for tomorrow’s Cattle on Feed Report.
Cash soybean and corn prices extend recent sharp decline over the past week.
Severe thunderstorms affected parts of northern Illinois, northern Indiana, northern Ohio, and southern Michigan on Sunday. But other Midwest areas continued to dry out.
Corn sales were near the midpoint of expectations, with exports holding strong. Old-crop soybean sales were near the upper end of expectations, but new-crop sales fell short. Wheat sales also met expectations.
Corn and soybean basis continue to fall but remain higher than the three-year averages.
On average, analysts surveyed by Reuters expect USDA will report the June 1 hog herd around 75.572 million head.
While corn prices rallied 22% from March 31 to June 1, soybean prices dipped 3%, lifting corn planting intentions at the expense of soybeans, according to FBN’s survey work.
Frozen pork stocks stood at 461.14 million lbs. at the end of May, which was a 4.22-million-lb. (0.9%) build from April versus the usual 34-million-lb.-retreat for the month.
More than a year later, we need to get back to normal because we need to start repairing 15 months of broken connections, writes Cherilyn Jolly-Nagel with Global Farmer Network.
Spring wheat ratings plummeted, and corn came in lower than expected. Find more highlights from today’s weekly Crop Progress and Condition Report here.