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US corn, soy stocks reach four-year highs as farmers gather huge crops

U.S. farmers and merchants are sitting on the greatest stocks of grains and soybeans left over from previous harvests in 4 years as they start gathering what are anticipated to be two of the biggest soybean and corn crops on record.

In the final figures for soy and corn still in storage bins from last year, the U.S. Department of Farming said on Monday that

stocks for both crops

were up 29% from a year ago on Sept. 1.

Farmers harvested a record corn crop in 2023 and

kept much of it in storage

as grain rates this year dropped to their least expensive levels since 2020. The depression has actually dragged down farmers' net estimated incomes by 23% from a record high simply two years earlier.

Growers have actually likewise faced stiff competition for global export sales from Brazil, keeping more supplies in your home. The United States is the world's biggest exporter of corn and the No. 2 soybean supplier after Brazil.

Corn stocks were 1.76 billion bushels on Sept. 1, up from 1.36 billion a year back, and soybean stocks were 342 million, up from 264 million a year previously, USDA said. Experts had expected 1.844 billion bushels of corn and 351 million bushels of soybeans.

Although stocks fell short of expectations, products are set to broaden. Farmers this autumn are anticipated to collect a record soybean crop and the 2nd most significant corn crop in history, according to USDA.

The federal government next week is slated to update its forecasts for just how much grain and soy will remain in storage before the 2025 harvests, an essential metric in the price of 2 of the world's biggest farming crops.

When the combines have actually finished this year's harvests and all the crops have actually been delivered for consumer and exporter requirements, the leftover corn and soybeans ought to go beyond the amount that has actually beinged in U.S. silos for 6 years, according to USDA data.

The

corn harvest

was 21% complete since Sunday and soybeans were 26%. gathered.

For wheat, U.S. stocks were 1.986 billion bushels on Sept. 1, up 12% from a year earlier and likewise a four-year high, USDA. said. Analysts anticipated 1.973 billion.

In another report, USDA pegged U.S. wheat production at. 1.971 billion bushels, below its previous projection for 1.982. billion. Experts had expected 1.966 billion.

(source: Reuters)