World Perspectives
feed-grains

Ignoring Half the Market

USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack told Iowa corn farmers last week that, “I pointed out to the President (AMLO in Mexico) that he’s also deeply concerned about people in his country, particularly those who are living on fixed incomes or small incomes, and if he doesn’t see the value of our yellow corn and biotech yellow corn coming into the country to feed livestock, he’s going to have higher food prices…That made an impression on him.” It is true that lower U.S. yellow corn prices help keep the cost of meat lower to Mexico’s majority low-income consumers, but this Biden Administration position continues to ignore the far broader adverse impacts of Mexico’s stated policy goals. First, the Secretary...

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feed-grains

WASDE Corn - Jan 2026

USDA’s Jan estimate for 2025/26 U.S. corn is for larger production and higher feed residual usage to result in greater ending stocks: Corn production is estimated at 17.0 billion bushels, up 269 million on a 0.5-bushel increase in yield to 186.5 bushels per acre and a 1.3-million acre ris...

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From WPI Consulting

Communicating importance of value-added products

Facing increasing pressure to quantify the value of export promotion efforts to investors, a U.S. industry organization retained WPI to develop a quantitative model that better communicated the importance of exports. The resulting model concluded that value-added meat exports contributed $0.45 cents per bushel to the price of corn, increasing support for that sector’s financial support of WPI’s client. In addition to serving the red meat industry with this type of analysis, WPI has generated similar deliverables for the U.S. soybean and poultry/egg industries.

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