The CBO predicted corn will stay below $4 a bushel for the next decade and soybeans won't go over $9 a bushel until 2023. For the 2019 harvest, corn is predicted to sell for $3.75 a bushel, compared to last year's $3.60 a bushel, and the soybean crop will probably get $8.23 a bushel, compared to $8.60 for last year's harvest. The last time prices were that low for that long was in the early and mid-2000's, Abbott reports. The forecast is based on farm subsidy costs, crop and market conditions in late 2018, and expert opinions.
The trade war with China was a major factor in the CBO's consideration. It has "driven down U.S. soybean prices while ballooning the soy stockpile to four times its usual size, aided by record-large harvests. Formerly, China bought 1 in 3 bushels of U.S. soybeans. Exports volume has been slow to recover," Abbott reports. Because of that, "farmers will plant far more corn than soybeans this year — 93 million acres vs 83.5 million acres — after a virtual tie at 89.1 million acres in 2018, when China was an eager customer."
The CBO predicts corn, soybean and wheat growers will switch en masse from the ARC crop insurance to the PLC, which offers better protection against sustained low crop prices, Abbott reports.
from The Rural Blog http://bit.ly/2sPHsYe Low prices for corn and soybeans predicted for years to come - Entrepreneur Generations
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