By
Bethany Waldrop Keiper MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- As estimated national corn acreage
and yields
continue to drop, Mississippi growers have a chance
to lock
in a good price for their crop.
The
deciding factor for 1995 corn yields and prices
to growers
will be the weather, which caused the current decline
in estimated
acreage and yields. Dr. Tom
Jones, extension agricultural economist
at Mississippi
State University, said December corn futures
have closed
as high as $2.92 per bushel in recent weeks. "Prices
are up compared to this time last year, when we
were in
the midst of a record corn crop and the accompanying
low prices,"
Jones said. "This year prices are up because of early-season
rains that delayed planting in the Midwest." Compared
with 1994, futures prices are about 12 cents
higher per
bushel, while Mississippi cash prices are about 30
cents higher
per bushel. Recent
USDA supply and demand reports indicate a 2
million acre
drop in estimated planted national corn acreage.
Estimated
national
yields are expected to be down 6 bushels per
acre. Mississippi's
corn acreage for 1995 is estimated at
320,000 acres,
a 3 percent drop from last year. Weather
in the Midwest kept farmers from planting on
time, and
will affect pollination and harvesting. "Total
U.S. production predicted for this year has
dropped from
8.6 billion bushels to 7.9 billion bushels," Jones
said. "But
even though corn usage and exports are expected to be
down, demand
is still expected to exceed corn supply this
year." Jones
recommended farmers try forward pricing up to
half their
crop, based on its quality, progress and historical
yields in
their fields. Most of
Mississippi's corn crop is in the
critical
reproductive
growth stages of silking and
tasseling.
This
year's crop yields will depend on cooperative
weather in
the next few weeks. "Rainfall,
stored soil moisture and temperatures in the
next few
weeks will determine overall grain yield -- how well the
ears fill
out," said Dr. Erick Larson, extension corn specialist
at MSU.
"The crop is sensitive to stress from too much heat and
not enough
rainfall." Recent
rainfall brought some relief to several dry
spots scattered
around the state. In
Noxubee County, Mississippi's top corn producing
county, the
corn pollinated well, despite high temperatures. "The
crop looks good, but growers really need a
good rainfall
to help fill out the ears with kernels," said Dr.
Dennis Reginelli,
Noxubee County agent. "In some areas of the
county, the
crop has been without rainfall for more than three
weeks." Further
west, in Yazoo County, adequate rainfall has
helped fill
out the corn, and the crop is in good condition. Corn
insect pressure is very light throughout the
state. Released:
June 23, 1995
Mississippi
Crop Report:
Corn Prices Rise
as Acreage Drops
Contact: Dr. Tom Jones,
(601)
325-2671
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:29:18
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cropreport/crop95/crop0623.html
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