Soybeans surge on temporary tariff cut

Soybeans were sharply higher on commercial and technical buying. The main source of support was the 90-day lowering of reciprocal tariffs between the U.S. and China. This is an agreement-in-principal and further negotiations are expected in the coming days. Old crop ending stocks were down on the month and the first look at new crop…Continue Reading

Wheat streak mosaic virus outbreak spotted in Kansas

An assistant professor of wheat and forage crops says an outbreak of wheat streak mosaic virus could be impacting crop conditions in Kansas. Kelsey Anderson Onofre is with Kansas State University. “This year in parts of the state it appears to be a bit more severe than the last several years. Part of this can…Continue Reading

China trade agreement good first step for soybean farmers

The president of the American Soybean Association says the trade deal in principle between the U.S. and China is a good first step.  Caleb Ragland, a Kentucky farmer, says the deal will temporarily reduce tariffs levied by the countries on exported goods like U.S. soybeans. “There’s still a litany of details to get worked out,”…Continue Reading

UK trade deal could boost Ohio ethanol production

The trade agreement in principle with the United Kingdom could be an opportunity for the state’s ethanol industry. Wendy Osborn says Ohio is currently the 7th largest producer of ethanol in the country. “There are seven plants here in Ohio for corn ethanol production,” she says. “Almost 40% of our corn goes into ethanol production,…Continue Reading

USDA trims 2025 red meat, poultry, egg outlooks

The USDA has trimmed its expectations for red meat and poultry production this year. Beef is now projected at 26.423 billion pounds, a drop of 277 million because of import restrictions from Mexico due to New World screwworm and lower dressed weights, with an average steer price of $214.51 per hundredweight, a jump of $9,…Continue Reading

Ag coalition calls for a protected full farm bill in reconciliation

The National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition is urging Congress to prevent putting a new farm bill in jeopardy by at least maintaining USDA spending in the reconciliation process. Policy Director Mike Lavendar tells Brownfield it’s hard to quantify the ramifications of lost essential services if the House Ag Committee goes through with proposed cuts this week.…Continue Reading

Gene-edited pigs approved for U.S. market

The chief operating officer at Genus PIC says pigs produced to be resistant to Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS) have been approved for sale to U.S. consumers by the Food and Drug Administration. Matt Culbertson tells Brownfield it’s the latest step in bringing gene-edited pigs to market. “It doesn’t actually trigger the first sales…Continue Reading

BioLumic secures funding for light activated seed traits

An ag tech company says its new light activated non-GMO seed traits have received a funding boost. Alex Fotsch with BioLumic tells Brownfield xTraits are the world’s first seed traits activated purely by precise light signals. “A one-time light signal before the seeds ever reach the field. They are non-GMO and naturally program the plant’s…Continue Reading

Cotton, rice stocks expected to be up in 2025/26

The USDA is projecting larger cotton and rice stocks in the coming marketing year. New crop rice ending stocks are seen at 47.5 million hundredweight, with increased imports and decreased exports canceling out a decline in production, while old crop stocks were up slightly from April to 45 million hundredweight on demand adjustments. The average…Continue Reading

Good crop emergence ahead of the cold

A farmer in northeast South Dakota says it’s been one of the earliest planting seasons ever. “We had good planting conditions, we weren’t mudding things in and people moved right along.” Bob Metz says the farm wrapped up planting on Monday, and corn and soybeans are emerging well, so far. “Corn is about an inch…Continue Reading

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