Trade war jitters may add some corn acres

Published 2025년 4월 30일

Tridge summary

U.S. Crop Watch producers are experiencing their fastest start to planting corn and soybeans in the project's history, despite trade tensions with China influencing crop choices. Many farmers are opting to plant more corn instead of soybeans due to low soybean prices and trade conflicts, with the USDA reporting a 12-year high in corn planting intentions at 95.3 million acres. Planting progress varies by region, with some delays caused by weather. Looking ahead to 2025, weather remains a key concern, particularly potential droughts in the western Corn Belt. Weekly updates will track crop conditions and market changes.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Back for their eighth edition, the U.S. Crop Watch producers are off to their quickest-ever start on planting their corn and soybean fields. However, trade conflicts with top U.S. soybean and sorghum buyer China have a couple of farmers adding a bit more corn than originally planned. Crop Watch follows 11 corn and 11 soybean fields across nine U.S. states, including two each in Iowa and Illinois. This is the project’s eighth consecutive year, featuring the same producers and locations. In 2021, Crop Watch was expanded to 11 producers from eight previously. As of Thursday, nine of the 22 Crop Watch fields were planted, the most for the date since the 11-field format began. That includes five corn and four soybean fields. However, that pace may briefly stall out because some producers are waiting for topsoil to dry out after recent rains. The next batch of Crop Watch plantings is targeted for next week. LITTLE MORE CORN Relatively low soybean prices already have U.S. farmers ...

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