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Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 118.45 bu. per acre. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square 871.40.
Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 193.5 bu. per acre for Indiana. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square averaged 1,240.
Scouts measured an average corn yield potential of 185.06 bu. per acre for Ohio. Soybean pod counts in 3’x3' came in at 1,195.37.
Scouts measured an average corn yield potential of 151.45 bu. per acre for the state. Soybean pod counts in 3’x3' came in at 996.86.
Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 182.6 bu. per acre for Nebraska. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square averaged 1,226.
Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 190.8 bu. per acre. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square averaged 1.218.
Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 177.4 bu. per acre. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square averaged 1,027.
Scouts measured average corn yield potential of 196.30 bu. per acre for Illinois. Pod counts in a 3’x3’ square averaged 1,279.79.
Full results for the state will be released tomorrow.
Waiting on OPEC+ decision on production cuts
Grain, soybean futures lower amid global recession concerns, U.S. dollar surge.
Corn and soybean futures pulled back from gains earlier this week, while wheat futures extended this week’s declines.
Corn ends slightly higher after harvest progress falls short of expectations; soybeans firmer as oil surges, dollar slumps.
China selling U.S. LNG to Europe, Mexican food retailers work to battle inflation and Eurozone PPI surges on the year...
Report: White House rules out banning natural gas exports | U.S. equities continue rally
NH3 posts an ominous price move as other N products stand pat...
Ahead of the Open | October 3, 2022 Corn futures climb overnight after harvest progress falls short of expectations; corn and wheat also firmer.
Soybeans and wheat are pulling support from outside markets, while corn is mildly favoring the downside.
Soybean futures end higher with support from crude oil rally; corn also firmer, wheat mixed,
Weekly export inspections for week ended Sept. 29 reported wheat inspections notably above expectations, while corn and beans were as expected. Soybean inspections are currently running 3.2% behind a year ago.