Friday, February 14, 2014
Monday, February 10, 2014
Corn falls despite USDA data
DES MOINES, Iowa (Agriculture.com)--The U.S. soybean stockpile is not changing, despite strong exports. Corn stocks are falling, according to the USDA's February Supply/Demand estimate Monday.
After reacting
positively to the USDA data, the corn market closed lower Monday.
The
March corn futures contract settled 1 1/4 cents lower at $4.43. The March
soybean futures contract finished 6 cents lower at $13.25. March wheat futures
ended 7 cents higher at $5.84 per bushel. The March soymeal futures contract
ended $2.50 per short ton lower at $444.20. The March soyoil futures ended
$0.17 higher at $38.73.
In its
report, USDA pegged the U.S. 2013-14 Soybean stocks, at the end of the
marketing year on August 31, at 150 million bushels. That is in comparison to
the trade's average estimate of 143 million bushels and the USDA's January
estimate of 150 million.
For corn,
the USDA sees the U.S. 2013-14 stocks at 1.481 billion bushels vs. the average
estimate of 1.606 billion bushels and the USDA's previous estimate of 1.631
billion.
The USDA
pegged the 2013-14 U.S. wheat stocks at 558 million bushels compared to the
average trade estimate of 602 million bushels and the USDA's previous estimate
of 608 million.
WORLD
STOCKPILES
On
Monday, the USDA estimated world wheat stocks at 183 million metric tons,
compared with the average trade estimate of 184.7 million metric tons and the
USDA's previous estimate of 185.4 million metric tons.
On
soybeans, the world stocks were estimated at 73.0 million metric tons vs. the
average trade estimate of 72.4 million metric tons and the USDA's previous
estimate at 72.3 million metric tons.
For
corn, the USDA estimates world stocks at 157.3 million metric tons vs. the
average trade estimate of 159.0 million metric tons vs. the USDA previous
estimate at 160 million metric tons
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