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Findings From USDA November Crop Reports

Anticipation derived from USDA’s first set of crop production and commodity supply and demand estimates since September. The November edition revealed findings that were not necessarily a surprise, as Patrick Boyle, the National Agricultural Statistics Service, reported for this year’s core crop:

“A record high. 186 bushels per acre is down four-tenths of a percent, or seven-tenths of a bushel, from the previous forecast. It’s up 3.7%, or 6.7 bushels, from last year. As a result, total production at 16.8 billion bushels is down four-tenths of a percent from September, but up 12.5% compared to 2024.”

That core production forecast number, however, remains a record, also projected to set a record for the 2025 soybean crop yield: “We’ll let a record high of 53 bushels per acre. That’s down nine-tenths of a percent, or half a bushel, from a previous forecast.”

So, what were some of the additional market reactions to the USDA November crop production reports? Chief Academy Seth Meyers says, first:

“The corn yield estimate was only down seven-tenths of a bushel. The trade was looking for something more like two and seven-tenths of a bushel. So, bigger supplies still— a 16-billion-bushel crop— and one of the contributing factors to being down nine and three-quarter cents.”

However, perhaps as equally notable, a core tidbit from this month’s domestic corn supply and demand estimate:

“A pretty amazing forecast for the corn export program at over 3 billion bushels, and we raised it 100 million bushels this month relative to September.”

A contributor, along with observed prices, that led USDA to raise the season-ending average price for corn 10 cents from the previous forecast at $4 a bushel.