Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Midwest tour to test U.S. crop forecasts

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Dominic Carey of Bloomberg News.

The government’s August corn and soybean crop forecasts are about to be put to the test.

After a report sent agricultur­e markets tumbling, projecting higher yields for America’s main crops than traders expected, grain-market watchers will be looking for a bit of ground truth. More than 100 crop scouts will count corn kernels and soybean pods during a four-day annual tour through fields across the eastern and western crop belt in seven Midwestern states.

Traders, brokers and analysts will use the Pro Farmer Midwest Crop Tour to gauge just how much damage one of the wettest planting seasons on record has caused. The tour will take a closer look at what actual crops look like after the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e ditched the analysis of fields for its August report, relying instead on input from farmers as well as satellite data.

“What is it clear is how the late planting will impact yields particular­ly in our northwest Ohio, southeast Michigan and northeast Indiana dry areas,” Pat Bowe, chief executive officer of U.S. crop handler Andersons Inc., said in a call with analysts. “We need good growing and harvest conditions, especially in our eastern dry areas, where a lower number of corn acres were planted.”

The tour — starting in Ohio for those traveling to the eastern crop belt or in South Dakota for those taking the western route — could help prove who is on the right and wrong sides of trades. Last week, money managers cut their bullish bets on corn to an 11-week low, a move likely triggered Aug. 12 by the biggest one-day corn selloff since 2013 after the USDA report.

Extreme crop variabilit­y will be in focus. Fields in the eastern half of the Midwest in states such as Indiana and Illinois are in worse shape than western Midwestern states like South Dakota and Nebraska, a difference some analysts failed to spot ahead of the USDA report. The disparity was highlighte­d Friday by Deere & Co., the world’s largest tractor manufactur­er.

The crop-scouting task this year will also be made more difficult both by record amounts of acres that couldn’t be planted because of relentless rain this spring and by the delayed developmen­t of some crops.

Corn could have stunted ear growth or few kernels while soybean plants may still be flowering and not yet have formed pods that will hold the beans.

Further complicati­ng matters are slight drought conditions creeping into parts of the top corn-producing state of Iowa. On top of that, there’s still “a long way to go” in the growing season and an early frost could still pose a risk to late-planted crops, said Deere chief economist Luke Chandler.

“History shows us that final yield numbers can vary relatively significan­tly from its August estimates,” he said, referring to the USDA.

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