USDA issued its outlook for 2023 major crops before the market opened this morning but the reaction to it was slow to develop. Perhaps initially because it didn’t really contain any surprises, and it mostly impacts the long-deferred contracts. Prices have been sky-high, and farmers are going to respond. Most have already bought their inputs and they are getting ready to plant. There was good trading volume, except in soybeans. USDA chose some unsurprising numbers:
Overall area planted to corn, wheat and soybeans will rise 6.2 million acres (3 percent). Wheat area will expand the most, up 8 percent, followed by corn at 2.9 percent, but that is up from last year’s smaller area. Soybean area is unchanged, though assuming...
What You Need to Know Today: The hot, dry weather forecast continues to drive strength in grain futures with corn and soybeans hitting another day of strong gains. Monday’s Crop Progress and Conditions data were in line with market expectations and showed relatively few concerns for the...
Yesterday we wrote about the Q1 GDP numbers and the June employment reports in an article entitled Real GDP for Q1 Relying on AI Buildout, Held Back by Consumer Spending. That article mentioned that consumer spending had become a drag on GDP. Nonetheless, real GDP in Q1 was revised upward to 2...
Key Takeaways: The Middle East and North Africa's arid climate and limited water resources have created a structural dependence on imported wheat. Government wheat tenders in major importing countries serve as important benchmarks for global trade, providing insight into exporter competitivene...