Farm Leader Warns USDA Report Hits Farmer Confidence as Commodity Prices Fall
6 Articles
6 Articles
On Monday evening, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) published its January report on the grain market.
Farm leader warns USDA report hits farmer confidence as commodity prices fall
The president of the Illinois Farm Bureau says farmers across the country are reeling from this week’s USDA report. “It was not a good day to be a producer.” Speaking to Brownfield from the American Farm Bureau Federation convention in Anaheim, Phillip Nelson says a dramatic shock to the corn market is not what farmers […] The post Farm leader warns USDA report hits farmer confidence as commodity prices fall appeared first on Brownfield Ag News.
The futures of American corn fell on Tuesday to a minimum of three months, deepening Monday's decline due to the Department of Agriculture's prospects for a huge supply after a record local harvest.The soy reached its lowest level in two and a half months after the USDA cut its US export forecasts on Monday and raised its harvest estimate for Brazil.The USDA surprised the corn market on Monday by raising its forecast of the US harvest of 2025 to…
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s first report of the year showed more production and stocks globally, pressured maize and soybeans and disarmed market expectations. The agency confirmed a scenario of greater grain supply than expected, which caused sharp falls in the United States, while in Argentina the impact was more moderate. Corn collapsed and soy fell back into the Chicago market after the publication of the first U.S. Department of Ag…
The USDA's January report for the 2025/26 season brings some milestones worth watching closely: rising global wheat stocks, more aggressive exports from the Black Sea basin and South America, and an abundant global corn supply. Even though the figures start from outside Europe, their effect will be felt in the EU market […]
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) surprised the markets on Monday, January 12, 2026 by increasing its outlook for world wheat, soybeans and maize production for the 2025-2026 season. This led to a stalling of prices in the wake of the Chicago Stock Exchange.
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