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United States corn plantings seen 5% lower in 2024, soy acres greater, USDA states

U.S. farmers are preparing to cut corn plantings by more than expected in 2024 while broadening soybean seedings, the U.S. Department of Farming ( USDA) said on Thursday, as low crop prices and high input costs have many growers wanting to cut expenditures.

Prices for both crops are hovering near three-year lows as global materials swell with rising South American harvests and slowing need from top importer China.

Farmers in 2015 were planting fencepost to fencepost and that's going to alter, what with rates being where they are, stated Jack Scoville, analyst with Rate Group in Chicago.

The USDA said farmers plan to seed 90.036 million acres with corn in 2024, down 5% from 94.641 million acres last year and below a USDA forecast in February of 91.000 million acres. Corn acres in the leading 14 producing states were down from last year and consistent to lower in 38 of 48 states, USDA said.

Soybean plantings were seen increasing 3% to 86.510 million acres, from 83.600 million in 2023, the fifth most on record however short of the 87.500 million acres forecast by USDA last month.

Analysts had actually expected corn plantings to decline to 91.776 million acres, while soybean seedings were seen at 86.530 million acres.

USDA forecasted that all U.S. wheat plantings will decrease by 4% to 47.498 million acres, from 49.575 million in 2023, led by a drop in winter wheat acres.

The USDA in a separate quarterly grain stocks report said stocks of U.S. corn since March 1 swelled to 8.347 billion bushels, the most in five years. Soybean stocks rose to a. two-year high of 1.845 billion bushels, while wheat stocks rose. to 1.087 billion bushels, a three-year high.

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(source: Reuters)