Corn and soybeans traded higher in Friday dealings after the U.S. Department of Agriculture reduced its forecasts for U.S.
First major USDA reports of 2025 buoy the spirits of corn and soybean farmers but bring heartburn to cotton farmers.
Shawn Hackett with Hackett Financial Advisors says it will be tough for corn to run to $5 because report just confirmed what the market already knew.
USDA lowered corn yield a whopping 3.8 bu. and soybeans 1 bu. which led to lower production and ending stocks.
Smith: The reductions in corn and soybean yields were bigger than expected in the January WASDE. Betty Resnick, an economist ...
Federal agricultural forecasters trimmed their final estimates for the harvests of corn and soybeans, by 1.8% and 2.1%, ...
The USDA says 2024 soybean production topped 2023. The crop of 4.366 billion bushels was up 5% on the year, with an average ...
A global market means a weather market can happen at any time, Allison Thompson of The Money Farm says. There are weather ...
If anything can derail a price rally, it is a curveball from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Chicago corn futures have ...
Even with recent shortfalls, inspections of corn and soybeans both remain ahead of last marketing year's pace. Corn inspections total 16.24 million tons for 2024/25, 24% higher than last year, while ...
With their grip on the industry’s intellectual property, Bayer and Corteva also control the majority of the market for corn ...
An extension ag economist suggests Friday’s supply and demand report from USDA could be positive for corn and soybean prices.