Agriculture News

USDA raised its estimate for corn acreage by nearly 1.5 million from the end of March, while soybean acres were lowered 400,000. Meanwhile, corn, soybean and wheat June 1 stocks were each above pre-report estimates.
Corn, soybeans and wheat posted mild corrective gains overnight amid light short-covering ahead of USDA’s reports later this morning.
In the wake of the heavy flooding in the northwestern Corn Belt, there have been a lot of questions about USDA’s methodology for assessing crop conditions. We’ve got the answer.
June 1 hog herd expanded 1.3% from year-ago, with the market hog inventory up 1.7%.
Cash winter wheat prices continue the seasonal price slide.
Soybeans and wheat are expected to open firmer, corn mixed.
Wheat sales during the week ended June 20 topped analysts’ pre-report range for the second straight week. Soybean sales fell 49% on the week, while soyoil saw net reductions, which were a marketing-year low.
While the acreage estimates will draw a lot of attention, quarterly stocks data has a history of producing major surprises, especially for corn.
Corn, soybeans and wheat held in tight ranges during the overnight session that saw two-sided trade.
Cash cattle prices surge to a record high last week.