We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Monday’s closing grain bids

May 13th, 2019

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.42 – 3.46

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

7.44 – 7.57

LifeLine Foods

3.57

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

 3.52 – 3.66

Soybeans

 7.37

Hard Wheat

 3.72

Soft Wheat

 3.97

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

Yellow Corn

3.47 – 3.66

White Corn

3.47 – 3.59

Soybeans

7.53 – 7.78

Hard Wheat

3.87 – 4.24

Soft Wheat

 4.07 – 4.27

Sorghum

5.83


USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

EPA Proposal Would Raise Biofuel Mandate in 2020

The Environmental Protection Agency is proposing an increase in the biofuels mandate. Two sources with knowledge of the proposal told Reuters that the agency wants to increase the volume of biofuels that refiners must blend annually to 20.04 billion gallons in 2020. That’s up from the requirement of 19.92 billion gallons in 2019. The proposal is currently under review by other government agencies before it can be finalized. It includes 15 billion gallons of conventional biofuels like ethanol, which is unchanged from this year. The proposal also includes 5.04 billion gallons of advanced biofuels, such as those made from agricultural waste, up from 4.92 billion in 2019. The biofuel mandate has helped farmers by creating a huge market for ethanol and other biofuels. However, oil refiners say compliance with the mandate costs a lot of money. An EPA spokesman did confirm that the agency has submitted the proposal but wouldn’t comment on anything it contained. As part of the advanced biofuel proposal, the agency set mandates for cellulosic ethanol at 540 million gallons and non-cellulosic at 4.5 billion gallons. The agency also set a biodiesel mandate of 2.43 billion gallons for 2021.

House Ag Chair Reacts to Pence Visit in Minnesota

Vice President Mike Pence made a visit last week to talk with farmers and other agricultural officials in Glyndon, Minnesota. House Ag Committee Chair Collin Peterson reacted to Pence’s visit to his district. “He visited my district to urge me to get the Speaker of the House to bring up a vote on the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement,” he says. “As a supporter of USMCA, I’m happy to make that request. However, the Vice President also knows that there are some hurdles to get over between now and getting this done.” First things first, Peterson says the Administration needs to submit it to the House so it can be considered. There are also challenges in the Senate as Finance Committee Chair Chuck Grassley says Republicans have told the Administration it’s “dead on arrival” without removing the Section 232 Tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada and Mexico. Peterson says the Administration hasn’t given his farmers any assurance that the tariff war with Canada and Mexico would end even if USMCA is officially passed. “My farmers are facing the double whammy of commodity prices below the cost of production and an uncertain trade future in all of their regular export markets,” Peterson adds.

U.S., China Wrap Up Trade Talks with No Deal

U.S. and Chinese officials wrapped up trade talks with no deal. However, there wasn’t any breakdown in talks, even as the U.S. Trade Representative moved forward on raising import tariffs from 10 to 25 percent on $200 billion in Chinese goods. Farmers and agricultural organizations across the country are very concerned about the move. The National Association of Wheat Growers, the American Soybean Association, and the National Corn Growers Association were hoping a deal would be in place by March first, right before farmers started back into their fields. Instead, the trade war with China is escalating. “U.S. wheat growers are facing tough times right now,” says Wheat Growers Association President Ben Scholz, “and these additional tariffs will continue to put a strain on our export markets and threaten decades worth of market development efforts.” Davie Stephens, ASA President, says his group believes President Trump supports farmers. “We’d like the President to hear us and believe what we are saying about consequences as the trade war drags on,” Stephens says. “Adding to the current problems, it took us 40 years to develop the China soy market. For most of us in farming, that’s two-thirds of our lives.” Lynn Chrisp, Corn Growers President, says corn farmers are watching the tariff battle as many can’t even get into fields to plant this year’s crop due to wet weather. The Administration says China has 3-4 weeks to come to an agreement or face tariffs on $325 billion in tariffs on items currently not covered by duties.

Trade row deepens: China ups tariffs on $60B in US goods

BEIJING (AP) — Deepening a trade battle and sending financial markets spinning, China announced Monday it was raising tariffs on $60 billion of U.S. goods in retaliation for the latest hike in U.S. tariffs on its exports.

The Finance Ministry said Monday the new penalty duties of 5% to 25% on hundreds of U.S. products including batteries, spinach and coffee will take effect June 1.

That followed Trump’s increase on Friday of duties on $200 billion of Chinese imports from 10% to 25% after charging that China had backtracked on commitments it made in earlier negotiations in a dispute over Beijing’s technology ambitions and perennial trade surplus.

Resuming his messages over Twitter early Monday, President Donald Trump warned Chinese President Xi Jinping  that China “will be hurt very badly” if it doesn’t agree to a trade deal.

Trump tweeted China “had a great deal, almost completed, & you backed out!”

Trump insisted the tariffs the U.S. has placed on Chinese goods don’t hurt American consumers, saying there is “no reason for the U.S. Consumer to pay the Tariffs.”

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow acknowledged Sunday that U.S. consumers and businesses pay the tariffs. “Both sides will pay,” he told Fox News.

China had vowed “necessary countermeasures” on Friday against Trump’s escalation of the tariff conflict.

Frazzled by the uncertainty, shares sank Monday across the globe. Futures contracts for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were down 2 percent before markets opened on Wall Street.

Beijing is running out of U.S. imports for penalties due to the lopsided trade balance between the world’s two largest economies. Regulators have targeted American companies in China by slowing down customs clearance for shipments and processing of business licenses.

The new tariffs are likely to hurt exporters on both sides, as well as European and Asian companies that trade between the United States and China or supply components and raw materials to their manufacturers.

The increases already in place have disrupted trade in goods from soybeans to medical equipment and sent shockwaves through other Asian economies that supply Chinese factories.

Forecasters have warned that the U.S. tariff hikes could disrupt a Chinese recovery that had appeared to be gaining traction. Growth in the world’s second-largest economy held steady at 6.4% over a year earlier in January-March, supported by higher government spending and bank lending.

The tensions “raise fresh doubts about this recovery path,” Morgan Stanley economists Robin Xing, Jenny Zheng and Zhipeng Cai said in a report.

The latest U.S. charges could knock 0.5 percentage points off annual Chinese economic growth and that loss could widen to 1 percentage point if both sides extend penalties to all of each other’s exports, economists say. That would pull annual growth below 6%, raising the risk of politically dangerous job losses.

The latest talks ended with no word of progress on Friday. Chinese officials said they hoped that the U.S. side would meet them halfway, describing the standoff as just a “setback.”

Trump might meet his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, during next month’s meeting of the Group of 20 major economies in Osaka, said Kudlow, his economic adviser.

Chinese officials have invited the top U.S. envoys – Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin -to Beijing, Kudlow said on Fox News. But he said there were no “definite plans.”

China’s state media has sought to reassure businesses and consumers that the ruling Communist Party has the resources and policy tools to respond to the dispute with Washington.

“There is nothing to be afraid of,” said the party newspaper People’s Daily. “The U.S.-instigated trade war against China is just a hurdle in China’s development process. It is no big deal.”

Trump started raising tariffs last July over complaints China steals or pressures companies to hand over technology.

Washington wants Beijing to roll back government support for Chinese companies striving to become global leaders in robotics and other technology. The U.S. and other trading partners say such efforts violate Beijing’s free-trade commitments.

A stumbling block has been U.S. insistence on an enforcement mechanism with penalties to ensure Beijing carries out its commitments. Economists say Chinese leaders probably reject that as a violation of Chinese sovereignty.

The abruptness of Trump’s announcement on May 5, just days before the last round of talks, about raising tariffs to 25% made companies see doing business in China as more uncertain, said Jake Parker, vice president of the U.S.-China Business Council, an industry group.

No matter what Washington and Beijing decide, “there is an enormous risk in the background that tariffs could come back into play at any moment,” he said.

Another Missouri farmer pleads guilty in massive organic grain fraud case

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A fifth farmer has pleaded guilty to his role in an organic grain fraud scheme that involved at least $140 million in sales of grain.

John Burton, of Clarksdale, Missouri, pleaded guilty Friday to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, as part of a plea agreement with federal prosecutors.

Burton, 52, admitted that grain grown on his non-organic fields was marketed and sold as organic and that unapproved substances were used on fields certified as organic. Federal prosecutors are seeking to require that he forfeit $2.2 million that was traced to the scheme.

Burton’s plea comes months after one of his associates, 61-year-old Randy Constant of Chillicothe, Missouri, pleaded guilty to charges alleging he masterminded the scheme.

Constant made many of the fraudulent sales through an Iowa grain brokerage that he owned. Three other Nebraska farmers have also pleaded guilty in the case.

Government forecasts bountiful Kansas wheat crop

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A government report forecasts a bountiful Kansas winter wheat harvest.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Friday that this year’s wheat crop is expected to be up 17 percent from a year ago. It predicted Kansas growers would bring in 323 million bushels.

The agency forecast the state’s average yield at 49 bushels per acre, up 11 bushels from last year.

It also anticipated that grain would be harvested from 6.6 million acres in Kansas, down 700,000 acres from a year ago.

The government’s estimate is a bit more optimistic than the one put out by participants in last week’s winter wheat tour who estimated the size of the Kansas crop at 306.5 million bushels.

Friday’s closing grain bids

May 10th, 2019

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.42 – 3.45

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

7.51 – 7.64

LifeLine Foods

3.52

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

 3.47 – 3.61

Soybeans

 7.44

Hard Wheat

 3.62

Soft Wheat

 3.84

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

Yellow Corn

3.42 – 3.61

White Corn

3.57 – 3.67

Soybeans

7.59 – 7.84

Hard Wheat

3.77 – 4.14

Soft Wheat

 3.95 – 4.15

Sorghum

5.75


USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

Equipment manufacturers urge end to tariffs

U.S. equipment manufacturers are urging the White House to end tariffs that are harming U.S. farmers and businesses. The Association of Equipment Manufacturers says the increase in tariffs as a negotiating tactic “only makes a bad situation worse.”

President Trump and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer are increasing certain tariffs from 10 percent to 25 percent on $200 billion of goods to China, and plan to introduce another 25 percent tariff on an additional $350 billion of goods in the coming months. China’s Ministry of Commerce released a statement earlier this week saying, “China will have to take necessary countermeasures,” being an escalation of retaliatory tariffs.

China calls the increase in trade friction by the U.S. “not in the interests of the people of the two countries and the people of the world.” The association says the additional tariffs will hurt American families that are “just trying to get by.” AEM is asking all industries take action through its national campaign, I Make America, at IMakeAmerica.com.

Midwest farm credit conditions continue decline

Farm credit conditions continue to deteriorate across the Midwest, according to the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank. The bank’s Agricultural Credit Survey published Thursday reveals the trend of steady deterioration in agricultural credit conditions continued in the first quarter of 2019. Reductions in farm income were sharpest in Nebraska and Missouri.

While some areas were heavily affected by spring flooding and blizzards, it may be months before the full impact to farm income is determined, given immediate damage and implications for the 2019 operating cycle are still being evaluated. The report says that as farm income remained low, demand for farm loans remained high and the ability of farm borrowers to repay loans weakened at a slightly faster pace than in previous quarters.

In addition, carry-over debt increased again for many borrowers and bankers continued to restructure debt and deny a modest amount of new loan requests due to cash flow shortages. The Kansas City Fed district includes portions of Colorado, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Wyoming.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File