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Nov
13
2017

Texas Daily Ag Market News Summary 11/13/17

Posted 6 years 162 days ago by

Feeder cattle auctions mixed; Futures up.
Fed cattle cash trade steady; Formula trades higher; Futures steady; Beef prices mixed.
Cotton prices higher.
Grains and soybeans lower.
Milk futures higher.
Crude oil higher; Natural gas lower.
Stock markets higher.


Texas feeder cattle auctions were mixed, reporting prices from steady to $4 lower and up to $4 higher. November Feeder cattle futures were 23 cents higher, closing at $158.70 per hundredweight (cwt). The Texas fed cattle had no reportable cash trade. December Fed cattle futures remained steady, closing at $120.57 per cwt. Wholesale boxed beef values were mixed, with Choice grade losing $1.11 to close at $212.74 per cwt and Select grade gaining $3.79 to close at $198.30 per cwt. Estimated cattle harvest for the week totaled 117,000, the same as last week’s total and up 3,000 from last year’s total. Year-to-date harvest is up 2.6%.

Cotton prices were steady to higher with cash prices gaining 0.01 cents to close at 69.63 cents per pound and December cotton futures remaining at 69.05 cents per pound.

Corn prices were lower with cash prices losing 5 cents to close at $3.45 per bushel and December futures losing 2 cents to close at $3.42 per bushel, respectively. Grain Sorghum cash prices were lower, closing at $5.50 per cwt.

Wheat prices were mixed with cash prices gaining 2 cents to close at $3.69 per bushel and December futures losing a nickel to close at $4.28 per bushel.

Milk prices were higher with November Class III milk gaining 3 cents to close at $16.80 per cwt.

Stock markets closed higher today, with all the three major U.S. indexes showing gains. December Crude oil futures were 2 cents higher to close at $56.76 per barrel.

Daily Market News Summary Data 11/13/17

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From Agri-Pulse:

Corn yield, Florida orange production provide surprise in crop reports

There were at least two big surprises from today’s USDA crop reports – record projected corn yields and less-than-expected hurricane damage to the Florida orange crop. That’s according to John Newton, director of market intelligence for the American Farm Bureau Federation.

In its monthly Crop Production report, USDA estimates the national corn yield at 175.4 bushels per acre, up 3.6 bushels from the October forecast and up 0.8 bushel from 2016. If realized, this would be the highest average yield ever and produce a crop of nearly 14.6 billion bushels, down 4 percent from last year’s record but up 2 percent from the October forecast.

“That yield figure was a really big surprise,” Newton said in a phone interview, especially after the stress the crop experienced from drought early in the growing season in parts of the Midwest. “Folks were expecting yield numbers around 172 or 173 bushels,” he said.

“The challenge now is, what are we going to do with all that corn?”

Newton also said USDA’s estimate of the Florida orange crop came in bigger than many expected, at 50 million boxes. That number is down from 54 million boxes projected last month, in the first USDA estimate after Irma struck in September. And, if realized, it would be the lowest production from the Sunshine State since the end of World War II. Still, it’s bigger than many were anticipating.

“Early estimates were that 70 percent of the crop may have been destroyed,” Newton said, adding that some analysts were predicting crop estimates of 30 million to 40 million boxes.

After USDA’s October report, Florida Citrus Mutual, the state’s largest growers association, questioned the government’s estimate, saying it was made too soon after the storm and was probably too high.

“The agency could not accurately account for the full extent of the catastrophic damage from Hurricane Irma,” the organization said last month. “Historically, the USDA has a high margin of error in crop years with a natural disaster.”

Other highlights from the Crop Production report and the World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE), which was also released Thursday:

-SOYBEANS: USDA says the soybean harvest will total 4.425 billion bushels, down 5 million bushels due to a fractionally lower yield, but still a record. Ending stocks are projected at 425 million bushels. The season-average price is projected at $9.30 a bushel, up 10 cents at the mid-point.

-WHEAT: Projected ending stocks were lowered 25 billion bushels due to increased exports (to 1 billion bushels), supported by recent sales to Iraq. The estimate for all-wheat production for the 2017-2018 crop year was left unchanged from October at 1.741 billion bushels.

-COTTON: The U.S. production forecast was raised 1 percent to 21.4 million bales, as a smaller crop in the West is more than offset by gains in the Southwest and other regions. U.S. ending stocks are seen at 6.1 million bales, up 300,000 bales, and, at 34 percent, at their highest share of use since 2008/2009.






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