Tridge summary
The USDA has reported mixed export inspections for the week ending June 29th, 2023. Wheat inspections have increased compared to the previous week and the same period last year. Corn, soybean, and sorghum inspections, on the other hand, have decreased compared to the previous year.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.
Original content
The USDA says export inspections were mixed during the week ending June 29th, 2023. The 2023/24 marketing year started June 1st, 2023 for wheat, while 2022/23 kicked off September 1st, 2022 for corn, sorghum, and soybeans. The USDA’s next set of supply and demand estimates is out Wednesday, July 12th at Noon Eastern/11 Central.Wheat came out at 336,349 tons, up 131,925 from the week ending June 22nd and 63,409 from the week ending June 30th, 2022. The top destinations were Brazil and Japan. Early in the 2023/24 marketing year, wheat inspections are 1,094,398 tons, compared to 1,612,768 in 2022/23.Corn was reported at 642,900 tons, 92,389 higher than the previous week, but 233,829 lower than a year ago. The main destinations were Japan and Mexico. In the final quarter of the 2022/23 marketing year, corn inspections are 33,128,164 tons, compared to 48,304,669 in 2021/22.Soybeans were pegged at 250,055 tons, 104,049 more than the prior week, but 197,959 less than a year ago. The ...