US rice crop will be big, at least in size

Published 2023년 4월 28일

Tridge summary

Planting and emergence of crops are moving forward ahead of schedule in various states, including Arkansas, which is significantly ahead of the average 5-year seeding rate. Demand for inputs is high, with tractor activity in medium-grain areas in California and increased production forecasted for Argentina and Paraguay. Asia is seeing steady or firm prices for rice, with the USDA's weekly export sales report showing an increase in net sales and exports.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

(By Dwight Roberts, USRPA) Planting continues to move forward wherever possible, with Arkansas significantly ahead of the average 5-year seeding rate. The largest rice producing state in the US is at 51/21% planted/emerged, compared to the 5-year average of 32/10%. Louisiana is at 86/81%, Mississippi at 39/11%, Missouri at 63/12% and Texas at 74/58%. In short, both planting and emergence are ahead of schedule. Farmers in NE Arkansas and SE Missouri must plant by June 1. One farmer from Arkansas commented that “where he buys seed, he was informed last week that he needs to take the rest of the inputs because there is so much demand that they can no longer monitor it in their warehouse”. Tractors are running at full throttle in medium-grain areas in California, with some of the first seeds planned to be hauled in this week. The market is largely on autopilot right now, with growers focused on seeding new crops with almost no supply of old crops. The latest tranche of business in ...
Source: Planetaarroz

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