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Corn Stays Near Four-Year Low on Hefty Crop Expectations

By Naveen Thukral and Sybille de La Hamaide

Chicago corn futures fell for a fourth consecutive session on Tuesday, trading near the four-year low hit the previous day on expectations of record U.S. production and sales of old-crop supplies by farmers.

Prices of soybeans and wheat were subdued by plentiful supplies, with one Singapore-based trader pointing to the Northern Hemisphere harvest, particularly from the Black Sea region.

The most active corn contract on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) Cv1 was down 0.3% at 3.85-1/4 a bushel at 0259 GMT, having earlier equalled Monday’s four-year low of $3.85. Corn has shed more than 3% in the past week.

Wheat Wv1 lost 0.7% to $5.21-1/2 a bushel while soybeans Sv1 fell 0.2% to $9.78-3/4 a bushel.

A flurry of U.S. farmer selling has continued this week, adding downward pressure to corn futures.

A closely followed crop tour run by advisory service ProFarmer projected record crop yields in major producer states Illinois and Iowa, reinforcing a global oversupply picture.

ProFarmer also reported that the U.S. soybean harvest will be even bigger than the government’s record forecast.

However, a heatwave and lack of rainfall in large parts of the U.S. Midwest could damage the soybean crop during its key development stage and has left industry players uncertain about projected record yields, analysts said.

In Europe, crop monitoring service MARS on Monday cut most of its average grain yield forecasts for the region, with another sharp reduction for maize as hot weather continues to take a toll of crops in southeast Europe.

Brazilian farmers have started sowing their 2024/25 first corn crop, the AgRural consultancy said on Monday, estimating work in the fields to have reached 4.2% of the projected area in the key centre-south region by late last week.

Wheat futures also face headwinds from cheap Black Sea supplies.

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Creating Pollinator Habitat From Farmland

Video: Creating Pollinator Habitat From Farmland

Why did we turn this land in to pollinator habitat? We we rented this farm consisting of six fields this 23 acres was the most challenging. Nine acres of is a large sandhill with trees all along the North edge. Most years it wouldn't produce very much grain at all. So when we bought this farm we decided it was time to take that hill out of production and put it to good use. So we seeded it to pollinator habitat. Here's a look at it three years in, and it's looking better every year. There's a strong marestail seedbank out there, but the pollinator species are beating it back a little more each year. The grasses have really come on strong this year. And we have a neighbor who keeps some beehives on the habitat. Hope you enjoy taking a tour of our pollinator habitat!