• Business
  • Politics
  • Investing
American Investor Club
Business

Crop tour projects record 2025 U.S. corn harvest, but disease could hit yields

by admin August 24, 2025
August 24, 2025

ROCHESTER, Minnesota, Aug 22 (Reuters) – U.S. farmers will harvest a record corn crop in 2025 after ideal weather across much of the Midwest this summer, but the bounty will fall short of the U.S. government’s lofty outlook as pockets of plant disease and heat stress dented yields in spots across the farm belt, crop consultancy Pro Farmer said on Friday.

Growers are also expected to reap a bumper soybean crop, although dry conditions in parts of the eastern Midwest and pockets of disease pressure in Iowa may limit yield potential, Pro Farmer said after its annual four-day tour across seven top-producing states this week.

The United States is the world’s top corn exporter and No. 2 soybean exporter, and favorable weather in most of the main growing states supported crops but pushed futures prices to recent multi-year lows.

The warm and wet conditions that fueled crop growth also fostered fungal diseases such as tar spot, southern rust and northern blight in corn, and sudden death syndrome in soybeans.

“Each day we’ve noted the disease pressure in corn. Tar spot, southern rust more widespread than we’ve ever seen before. Those are going to be some real yield robbers,” said Lane Akre, Pro Farmer economist and one of the leaders of the tour’s eastern leg.

Pro Farmer projected 2025 U.S. corn production at a record 16.204 billion bushels, with an average yield of 182.7 bushels per acre, and soybean production at 4.246 billion bushels, with an average yield of 53.0 bpa.

The outlook is below the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s latest forecast for corn production at a record 16.742 billion bushels with yields averaging 188.8 bpa, and soybean production at 4.292 billion bushels with record average yields of 53.6 bpa.

Crop scouts on the Pro Farmer tour saw more disease-hit fields than normal across the Midwest farm belt this week, although it is not yet clear whether these diseases will blow up into significant yield loss.

At one stop in northwest Illinois, the corn field appeared healthy and green from the roadside, but 30 to 40 steps in, leaves were streaked with rust, leaving crop scouts covered in color. Overhead, bright yellow crop dusters banked low as they sprayed wide white plumes of fungicide.

Jake Guse, a Minnesota row crop farmer and crop scout on the eastern leg of the tour, said disease levels were the worst and most widespread that many crop scouts had ever seen on the tour.

“As we traveled across Indiana, we started seeing more (disease). In Illinois, started getting bad — and it was all over Iowa,” Guse said of three of the largest producing states.

However, crop scouts also found exceptional yield prospects that could help cushion any disease-related yield decline.

The strong production prospects may not be welcome news to farmers, who are facing a third straight year of declining corn prices due to excess supplies and only a modest improvement in soybean prices, according to USDA data.

Production costs remain high while trade tensions with key markets like China, the top soybean importer, have left demand uncertain.

While the USDA is forecasting that the nation’s farm economy will improve in 2025, that boost will largely come from a massive influx of federal funding the Trump administration plans to send to rural America, according to USDA data.

Corn and soybean futures on the Chicago Board of Trade firmed this week as reports from the crop tour suggested that recent USDA harvest forecasts may be too high.

The benchmark CBOT December corn contract CZ25 ended the week up 1.5%, its first weekly gain in a week in five weeks, while November soybeans SX25 also rose 1.5% and hit a one-month high.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

previous post
Apple in talks to use Google Gemini for updated Siri: report
next post
Tech 5: Softbank to Invest US$2 Billion in Intel, Figure Seeks Nasdaq IPO

You may also like

Trump administration ramps up pressure on Labor Department...

September 11, 2025

Kenvue stock drops 10% on report RFK Jr....

September 8, 2025

Mortgage rates see biggest one-day drop in over...

September 6, 2025

Trump family’s American Bitcoin makes stock market debut

September 5, 2025

Paramount mandates 5-day-a-week return to office ahead of...

September 5, 2025

Apple has survived Trump’s tariffs so far. It...

September 5, 2025

Disney to pay $10 million to settle FTC...

September 4, 2025

Crash victims’ families prepare to make what could...

September 4, 2025

Amazon cracks down on Prime free shipping sharing

September 4, 2025

U.S. judge orders Google to share search data...

September 3, 2025

    No fluff, just substance. Sign up for curated updates designed to keep you ahead.

    Curated guidance for living and investing wisely. Subscribe for expert analysis on finance, wealth management, and the life decisions that matter.

    Name Price24H (%)
    bitcoin
    Bitcoin(BTC)
    $115,740.89
    0.51%
    ethereum
    Ethereum(ETH)
    $4,710.52
    4.01%
    ripple
    XRP(XRP)
    $3.11
    1.56%
    tether
    Tether(USDT)
    $1.00
    -0.03%
    binancecoin
    BNB(BNB)
    $924.87
    2.29%
    solana
    Solana(SOL)
    $242.66
    2.17%
    usd-coin
    USDC(USDC)
    $1.00
    -0.06%
    staked-ether
    Lido Staked Ether(STETH)
    $4,700.52
    3.97%
    dogecoin
    Dogecoin(DOGE)
    $0.283662
    8.95%
    cardano
    Cardano(ADA)
    $0.93
    3.28%
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Copyright © 2025 americaninvestorclub.com | All Rights Reserved


    Back To Top
    American Investor Club
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Investing
    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.