Outlook For U.S. Agricultural Exports

Published 2022년 6월 29일

Tridge summary

The article provides an overview of the U.S. Agricultural Exports forecast for FY 2022. Grain and feed exports are expected to decrease slightly from the August forecast, with lower values for corn, sorghum, and rice. Wheat exports remain unchanged due to higher unit values, but tight stocks and export competition could affect market dynamics. Oilseed and product exports are also expected to decrease due to lower soybean and soybean meal export values, despite a larger 2021 soybean harvest. Cotton exports are forecast to increase due to higher unit values. Livestock, poultry, and dairy exports are projected to increase, with the exception of pork. Horticultural product exports are expected to remain steady. Ethanol exports are forecast to reach a record $2.9 billion, driven by higher unit values and increased demand for ethanol as other industrial chemicals. However, potential factors such as lower blending rates to reduce inflation could impact demand. The article also discusses the potential impact of international factors such as China's fuel ethanol sales ban and economic recovery in India, Mexico, and the UK on U.S. agricultural export markets.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Outlook For U.S. Ag ExportsFY 2022 U.S. grain and feed exports are forecast at $41.5 billion, down $300 million from the August forecast on lower corn, sorghum, and rice export values. Corn exports are forecast at $17.0 billion, down $100 million from the August forecast, due to lower unit values despite larger volumes. U.S. corn is expected to be competitive until new crop supplies from South America come onto the market in early 2022. Sorghum exports are forecast at $2.4 billion, down $100 million on lower unit values. Feed and fodder exports are unchanged at $8.3 billion. Wheat exports are forecast at $7.1 billion, unchanged from the August forecast. Higher unit values are offset by lower volumes (smaller production) and greater export competition. U.S. wheat prices are elevated due to a drought-impacted crop resulting in tight stocks for hard red winter, spring, durum, and white wheat, which are forecast at their lowest levels since 2007/08. Rice exports are forecast down $100 ...
Source: Beef2live

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