Bankster Crime

Exposing Fraud in the Banking System

USDA Crop Report Shocker Sends Corn Futures Surging

Featured Story

Chicago corn futures surged 8% in the last two sessions after a massive reduction to the U.S. government’s acreage estimate reported Reuters

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) crop report on Tuesday showed farmers planted 92 million acres of corn in 1H20, which was a huge miss in expectations and 5 million acres below the USDA’s March forecast of 97 million acres.

This was the largest miss in a March-to-June corn acreage crop report since 1983 – just before “Trading Places” hit theaters –  resulting in an 8% surge in corn futures trading in Chicago. 

Arlan Suderman, the chief commodities economist for StoneX, said the USDA report suggests that farmers are “tightening up their finances and were more conservative than normal in planting this year’s crops.” 

“All these lower acreage numbers had people wondering what happened to the acres and to which crop or crops they were reallocated. But the acres were not planted at all,” Karen Braun, a commodity analyst with Reuters, wrote in a note. 

Estimates for corn stockpiles are expected to be above average this year as coronavirus pandemic roils demand, USDA noted. 

A commodity note via Commerzbank bank said the report “makes it questionable whether a record crop – that had almost been regarded as a dead cert – will be harvested after all.”

With the USDA crop report behind traders – the market will soon focus on weather trends in the northern hemisphere as the most critical part of the growing season is ahead: 

“With the USDA reports out of the way, traders will focus on weather forecasts and Chinese demand for the next direction,” commodity research firm Allendale said in a note, adding that, “July promises to be a warmer than usual month with more limited rainfall resulting in net drying and the dryness that evolves in July will set the tone for crop development the remainder of summer.” 

New weather models suggest warm and dry conditions for much of the US. 

“As the first month of meteorological summer closes, we assess early season weather and crop conditions during June. The most significant warmth stretched from the Central U.S. Plains across to the Upper Midwest, where temperatures averaged between 2-8 °F above normal for the month. Only portions of the Southeast U.S. and Canada were moderately cooler than normal, but unlikely hurt crops at this point. Rainfall for the month was mixed but likely was more biased to the dry side than the wet, with only pockets of the U.S. Deep South and Great Lakes receiving 1-2 inches of rainfall surpluses. Portions of the Plains and eastern Midwest have experienced similar rainfall anomalies to the downside. Nonetheless, crop impacts are (so far) negligible for corn and soybeans, as good-to-excellent condition scores from USDA bumped up this week to 73% and 71%, respectively, and remain close to most recent years. Spring wheat conditions dropped for the second consecutive week, with good-to-excellent scores at 69%, and the second-lowest at this time of year over the last 5 years, only second to 2017. While scores are still elevated, warmth and dryness may already be impacting spring wheat conditions in particular and will need to be monitored into July for continued impacts,” Tom Walsh, head of weather research at Reuters, wrote in a note. 

FIGURE 2: Forecasted precipitation anomaly pattern for July 2020. Precipitation 25-75 mm below normal of normal is indicated by a “-“, precipitation within 25 mm of normal is marked by “-“, and precipitation 25-75 mm above normal is indicated by a “+”. 

Walsh said, “warm and dry conditions appear to be looking into the forecast” for July.

“Cool and wetter than normal weather has been quite favorable for the Midwest as of late, but a warming trend is expected over the next 10-14 days according to most numerical model guidance,” he said. 

FIGURE: 10-day rainfall deviations (in mm) from the latest 00z GFS operational (left) and EC operational (right) model runs, indicating wet weather across much of the Canadian Prairies, Northern U.S. Plains, and possibly the Southeast U.S. Pockets of dry weather will persist across the Central Plains and develop in parts of the Midwest/Great Lakes as well. Model discrepancies between GFS & EC should be monitored in the days to come. SOURCES: NOAA/ECMWF.

USDA report bounces corn futures from a near-decade low.

The next big fundamental move in corn will be upcoming weather reports in the coming weeks.  Source: ZeroHedge

BanksterCrime

Don't Miss

Tron, Synthetix, STEEM, FTX Token Price Analysis

By StevieRay Hansen

By Saif Naqvi As market leaders Bitcoin and Ethereum moved deeper into the bearish zone, other altcoins registered losses and scrambled to find support at various levels. Tron hovered…

Read More

I Bought The Bitcoin Dip”…Now What?

By StevieRay Hansen

What is Cryptocurrency? It is a form of digital money, in short. For the long answer, keep reading our “What is cryptocurrency” guide. More and…

Read More

Great Collapse (GC) of 2019, doing so

By StevieRay Hansen

with little or no advance warning… Banks will be the major contributor to the collapse of the United States economy, banks have become EVIL,SRH. Usury…

Read More

Market AGAIN More Precariously Euphoric Than Any Time in History

By StevieRay Hansen

The sudden hope of multiple vaccines appears to have inoculated the market against an epidemic of bad news that would normally drive markets down. First,…

Read More

“We Worry About Armed Conflict”: Investors Are Suddenly Freaking Out About Post-Election Violence

By StevieRay Hansen

Earlier we reported that amid fears of election night chaos, the White House has been put on lockdown, and that according to NBC sources, beginning…

Read More

StevieRay Hansen

In his riveting memoir, "A Long Journey Home", StevieRay Hansen will lead you through his incredible journey from homeless kid to multimillionaire oilman willing to give a helping hand to other throwaway kids. Available on Amazon.

LEAVE A RESPONSE

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *