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The USDA's Corn Crop Forecasts Are Almost Always Too Optimistic

Rob Wile   

The USDA's Corn Crop Forecasts Are Almost Always Too Optimistic
Stock Market1 min read

Morgan Stanley agriculture analyst Bennett Meier hammers the USDA's 2013 corn crop outlook today, saying the agency's late-winter corn call is almost always wrong.

Given asymmetric yield risk, USDA’s first forecasts are overly optimistic in our view. USDA based its 163.6 bu/acre corn yield forecast on a weather-adjusted trend model, assuming “normal” early-season plantings and June/July weather. Good weather during the growing season could produce such an outcome, but we view the USDA yield outlook as more of a bull case than a base case.

The USDA has a history of being too optimistic early in the marketing year, with final yields coming in below initial estimates in 5 of the past 6 years. Moreover, the ongoing drought in the US plains presents significant downside risk in the event of a dry summer.

Meier is calling for yields of 155 bushels per acre and 13.8 billion total bushels of production, compared with the USDA's 163.6 bu/acre and 14.5 billion figure.

As it happens, Maier's projections still represent an improvement over last year's figures of 123.4 yield and 10.7 billion bushels of production.

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