AgDay
Hosted by Haley Bickelhaupt, AgDay provides the nation’s farmers and ranchers with the latest news, weather and business headlines, and features the people and places unique to the industry and small-town America.
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Latest News
Jon Scheve discusses why corn prices might continue to go down for the next few months while soybean prices could have upside potential.
Starting on Tuesday, producers can apply for ERP benefits, regardless of whether they received a pre-filled form from USDA or not.
Soybeans, meal and corn fall on profit taking, watching SA weather, China export news, crude oil. Cattle and hogs extend gains, can they keep going? Chip Nellinger, Blue Reef Agri-Marketing has details.
Several factors are leading economists to believe the price of corn will keep ethanol profits steady in the near future.
Maybe it’s because I’m a farm kid at heart, but I think the best Halloween costume ideas come straight from the farm. And I’m not the only one on our team here at Farm Journal who feels that way.
Soybeans lower with profit taking in meal and better SA weather. That’s weighing on corn, plus lower crude oil and SRW wheat. Livestock extend gains but for how long? Kent Beadle, Paradigm Futures, has more.
Grains lower, livestock higher. But when will row crops break out of their sideways ranges? Can beans rally if corn doesn’t? When should livestock producers buy feed? We ask Jon Scheve, Superior Feed Ingredients.
Corn and soybean prices seem stuck. So, what catalyst could it take to move commodity prices higher? There are a few, but analysts say the reality is there’s simply no story at the moment.
Political unrest, a healthy ag economy and the start of an election year. These are all reasons economists in the October Ag Economists’ Monthly Monitor think it could 2025 before Congress passes a new farm bill.
Bart Fischer, co-director of the Agricultural and Food Policy Center at Texas A&M, spotlights two topics that will be updated in the next farm bill.