News
High yields lead to high nutrient removal rates, but next year, nutrient replacement and feeding a new crop comes at a higher cost
Corn, soybeans and wheat each have favored a sideways tone much of this week ahead of key USDA reports due out Friday.
Focus turning to USDA supply and demand report Friday
What our supply and demand expectations are for both old-crop and new-crop.
According to data released yesterday, the U.S. agricultural trade deficit reached a record high for July 2025, with imports outpacing exports by $4.97 billion—an increase of about 9% compared to July of the previous year.
Corn, soybeans and wheat each favored the downside overnight though selling pressure was rather limited.
Unsettled weather in Midwest next couple of days
Soybean ratings are now lower than at this time last year
Grain markets make steady gains while nearby livestock contracts slide
Weekly wheat export inspections slid 379,000 MT from the previous week, but were still within the expected pre-report range.