Soybean, sorghum export inspections up on week in the US

Published 2024년 1월 16일

Tridge summary

The USDA reports that corn export inspections are currently ahead of projections for the 2023/24 marketing year, with 875,621 tons of corn inspected. Wheat inspections for the same period are at 234,205 tons, and sorghum inspections at 296,128 tons, with leading destinations for all three being Japan, Mexico, China, and Eritrea. Despite lower numbers compared to the previous year, soybean inspections for the 2023/24 marketing year are at 1,264,468 tons.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The USDA says that as of the week ending January 11th, 2024, corn export inspections are ahead of the pace needed to meet projections for the current marketing year. The 2023/24 marketing year got underway June 1st, 2023 for wheat and September 1st, 2023 for corn, sorghum, and soybeans. The USDA’s next set of supply and demand estimates is out February 8th.Wheat came out at 234,205 tons, down 267,705 from the week ending January 4th and 91,462 from the week ending January 12th, 2023. The leading destinations were Japan and Mexico. At this point in the 2033/24 marketing year, wheat inspections are 10,377,165 tons, compared to 12,427,689 in 2022/23.Corn was reported at 875,621 tons, 216,741 lower than the previous week, but 95,833 higher than this time last year. The primary destinations were Mexico and Japan. For the marketing year to date, corn inspections are 13,918,431 tons, compared to 10,782,138 a year ago.Soybeans were pegged at 1,264,468 tons, 223,840 more than the prior ...

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