USDA reports weekly U.S. grain export inspections fall for corn, soybeans and wheat
Updated
Updated · MarketWatch · Apr 27
USDA reports weekly U.S. grain export inspections fall for corn, soybeans and wheat
11 articles · Updated · MarketWatch · Apr 27
For the week ended April 23, corn inspections were 1.64 million tons, soybeans 628,826 tons, and wheat 365,156 tons, all down from the previous week.
Corn and wheat inspections remain ahead of last year's pace for the full marketing year, while soybeans lag 24% behind. CBOT grain futures rose 0.9% for corn, soybeans, and wheat on Monday.
Despite the weekly decline, cumulative corn and wheat exports show year-over-year growth, but soybeans continue to underperform. The USDA's report influences market sentiment and trading activity in U.S. grain futures.
U.S. corn exports are surging while soybeans falter. What does this reveal about shifting global food demands?
Grain prices are rising despite falling weekly exports. What does the market know that the data doesn't show?
China is buying fewer U.S. soybeans. Is this a temporary trade tactic or a permanent strategic shift?
With soybean exports plummeting, can new trade deals rescue American farmers from a 'generational downturn'?
Brazil now dominates the global soybean market. Is the era of U.S. agricultural supremacy ending?
Geopolitical fears are driving wheat prices up. Is the world stockpiling grain for a larger conflict?