By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Growers are just completing their part of the
soybean planting process, and now it's Mother Nature's
turn. Tom
Jones, agricultural economist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the weather forecasts
are making the soybean market more volatile than normal as
predictions range from adequate moisture to severe drought
conditions for this season. "According
to market analysts, if the national crop experiences a
severe drought, we could produce 2.4 billion bushels at
about $7 per bushel. With only a moderate drought, the yield
would increase to 2.7 billion bushels, but the price would
decline to $5. Adequate moisture could mean a 3 billion
bushel harvest and prices around $4," Jones said. "On the
first of June, prices were in the moderate- to
severe-drought range, or between $5.13 and $5.36 per
bushel." Jones
said farmers need to know how much their crop cost to grow
and their fields' normal yields to determine a breakeven
cost so they are ready to react when the price reaches an
expected profit level. "Those
who make it this year will be the farmers who know the price
they need and can react when the market turns favorable.
Mississippi's inconsistent yields mean farmers may only want
to price a maximum of half of their expected crop," he said.
"Very few actually sell at the best price, but a farmer's
best goal is just to make a consistent profit." Jones
said a majority of Mississippi's soybean growers sell their
crop for cash at harvest, rather than forward pricing or
selling on the futures market. "The
lowest price you'll get is at harvest time," he
said. Alan
Blaine, Extension soybean specialist, said crops are running
out of moisture quickly as late spring fields look more like
they do in midsummer. "We need
a good general rain because even a one-inch rain just won't
last long in these conditions," Blaine said. "Some of the
early beans needed irrigation by the end of May, but early
beans look like a million bucks. They are the best beans in
the state." Blaine
said some isolated problems with grasshoppers and snails can
be traced to no-till and reduced tillage fields. "Possibly
applying burndowns earlier could have made these pests move
out of the fields for other food sources," Blaine
said. Jim
Thomas, Extension irrigation specialist, said the lack of
adequate weed control is another problem impacted by the
drought conditions. "When
water is short, crops don't need to be competing with other
plants for moisture," Thomas said. "Now, growers need to
watch narrow-row crops closely. As crops begin to canopy,
they will require more water than wider-row crops or those
that have not begun to canopy." Released:
June 2, 2000
Mississippi
Crop Report
Soybeans Face
Uphill Battles In Fields, Market
Contact: Dr. Tom Jones, (662) 325-1788, and Dr. Alan Blaine
(662) 325-4074
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:28:19
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop00/cr000602.htm
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