World Perspectives
feed-grains

NCGA Complains About Tariffs and Margins

The National Corn Growers Association (NCGA), along with 25 state associations, sent a letter on 1 August to USTR Jamieson Greer, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins complaining about “the calamitous environment for farmers who are trying to plan for harvest and next season” due to trade uncertainty. The letter argues that rising input prices and dropping corn prices are squeezing margins. As the letter notes, the 2025 forecast shows fertilizer costs are 36 percent of corn’s cost of production. More specifically: Phosphate fertilizer has seen an increase of more than 60 percent over the past decade, with retail prices for monoammonium phosphate (MAP) 9 percent higher and diammonium phospha...

Related Articles
feed-grains soy-oilseeds wheat

Market Commentary: Turnaround Tuesday for Grains; Soybeans Sag; New Highs for Cattle

Corn and wheat found technical support Tuesday that created turnarounds on their respective charts and, in the case of wheat, formed bullish key reversals. News of smaller corn yields in the Midwest and strong export sales performance last week helped boost corn and wheat values following Monda...

livestock

The Strange Effects of Screwworm

For the first six months of 2025, cattle imports from Mexico are down 73.1 percent due to restrictions from the discovery of New World Screwworm (NWS) in Mexico. From January to July 2024 there were 853,976 head imported into the U.S. from Mexico, but in 2025 that volume over the same time peri...

feed-grains soy-oilseeds wheat

Summary of Futures

Dec 25 Corn closed at $4.13/bushel, up $0.0225 from yesterday's close.  Dec 25 Wheat closed at $5.0025/bushel, up $0.035 from yesterday's close.  Nov 25 Soybeans closed at $10.065/bushel, down $0.0125 from yesterday's close.  Dec 25 Soymeal closed at $274.3/short ton, up $0.2 fro...

feed-grains soy-oilseeds wheat

Market Commentary: Turnaround Tuesday for Grains; Soybeans Sag; New Highs for Cattle

Corn and wheat found technical support Tuesday that created turnarounds on their respective charts and, in the case of wheat, formed bullish key reversals. News of smaller corn yields in the Midwest and strong export sales performance last week helped boost corn and wheat values following Monda...

livestock

The Strange Effects of Screwworm

For the first six months of 2025, cattle imports from Mexico are down 73.1 percent due to restrictions from the discovery of New World Screwworm (NWS) in Mexico. From January to July 2024 there were 853,976 head imported into the U.S. from Mexico, but in 2025 that volume over the same time peri...

feed-grains soy-oilseeds wheat

Summary of Futures

Dec 25 Corn closed at $4.13/bushel, up $0.0225 from yesterday's close.  Dec 25 Wheat closed at $5.0025/bushel, up $0.035 from yesterday's close.  Nov 25 Soybeans closed at $10.065/bushel, down $0.0125 from yesterday's close.  Dec 25 Soymeal closed at $274.3/short ton, up $0.2 fro...

Worse Before Better; Tech Rescue; Value Added

Worse Before Better First China announced restrictions on rare earth exports, then President Trump announced 100 percent tariffs and software restrictions starting 1 November in retaliation, until he signaled everything was just a bad day. China then sanctioned a U.S. shipping subsidiary. Some...

Image
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.

Search World Perspectives

Sign In to World Perspectives

Don’t have an account yet? Sign Up