(Bloomberg) -- Corn fell for the first time in five
sessions in Chicago on speculation that a jump in the number of
viable plants this year will produce the largest-ever crop in the
U.S., the biggest global exporter.
U.S. farmers may harvest a record number of ears per acre,
Bill Nelson, a vice president for A.G. Edwards Inc. in St. Louis,
said in a report to clients today after touring fields across the
Midwest last week. Temperatures as much as 6 degrees Fahrenheit
below normal limited stress in fields that received 25 percent of
normal rain in the last 30 days, Nelson said in the report.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
sessions in Chicago on speculation that a jump in the number of
viable plants this year will produce the largest-ever crop in the
U.S., the biggest global exporter.
U.S. farmers may harvest a record number of ears per acre,
Bill Nelson, a vice president for A.G. Edwards Inc. in St. Louis,
said in a report to clients today after touring fields across the
Midwest last week. Temperatures as much as 6 degrees Fahrenheit
below normal limited stress in fields that received 25 percent of
normal rain in the last 30 days, Nelson said in the report.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
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