Brazilian farmers are slow sellers of their 2022/23 corn production

Published 2023년 2월 28일

Tridge summary

Farmers in Brazil's Mato Grosso state, the country's largest safrinha corn producer, are facing challenges in selling their 2022/23 corn production slowly due to concerns about the crop and lower prices compared to last year. According to the Mato Grosso Institute of Agricultural Economics (Imea), only 25% of the anticipated production has been sold, with 50% of the safrinha corn planting behind schedule. There is concern that delayed planting could lead to a decrease in yield, and farmers are waiting for higher prices before selling. The average price for the 2022/23 corn sold in January was R$ 60.89 per sack, a decrease from the previous year's average price of R$ 63.21 per sack.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Farmers in Mato Grosso have been slow sellers of their anticipated 2022/23 corn production due to questions about the overall crop and lower prices compared to last year. According to the Mato Grosso Institute of Agricultural Economics (Imea), farmers in the state have sold 25% of their anticipated 2022/23 safrinha corn production. This represents an advance of 2% compared to the prior month. One reason for their cautious approach are concerns about delayed planting of the safrinha corn. Imea reported that farmers in the state had planted 50% of their safrinha corn as of late last week compared to 68.4% last year and 63.3% average. This represents an advance of 16.1% for the week. Imea indicated that 80% of the safrinha corn needs be planted by the end of February if their 2022/23 statewide corn yield projection of 104.2 sacks per hectare (99.4 bu/ac) is to be achieved. Technicians at Imea are now estimating that 69% of the safrinha corn will be planted by the end of February. The ...

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