UPDATE: USDA Reports Largest Soybean Crop Ever, as Stocks Grow

The U.S. Department of Agriculture says farmers are expected to harvest the largest soybean crop on record, but they have to deal with a constricted market in which to sell their crop.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture says farmers are expected to harvest the largest soybean crop on record, but they have to deal with a constricted market in which to sell their crop because of the administration’s tariff battle with China. New crop production numbers were released on Thursday. Corn remains on track to have the highest yield and the second highest production on record. USDA is forecasting the average corn yield at 178.9 bushels per acre. That’s down 1.8 bushels from October, but still up 2.3 bushels from last year. The cut to production was largely due to falling yields in Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois and South Dakota. As for soybeans, USDA is calling for an average yield of 52.1 bushels per acre. That’s down 1.0 from last month. We also have new cotton numbers. Production is forecasted at 18.4 million 480 pound bales. That’s down 7% from October, but yield is expected to average 852 pounds per harvested acres, off 49 pounds from last month and down 53 pounds from last year. The other side of the report shows stocks are continuing to grow. Corn ending stocks are 1.736 billion bushels. That’s down 77 million bushels from last month. Corn exports are reduced 25 million bushels based on expectations of increased competitions from Ukraine. As for soybeans, U.S. Soybean stocks are projected at 955 million bushels. That up 70 million from last month. USDA reduced exports on lower imports projected for China.

Related links:

USDA Crop Production Report

World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Sam Hudson of Corn Belt Marketing says funds sold the early bounce in grain markets with no bullish story.
The request allocates $10 billion to row and specialty crop producers for crops planted in 2026, with the remaining $1.1 billion designated for Florida farmers hit by winter storms in late 2025 and early 2026.
After a down day on Tuesday the grain markets were higher early Wednesday a result of short covering according to Lane Akre, economist with Pro Farmer. However, he thinks the market has also taken out too much weather premium.
Read Next
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App