Anyone who farmed in the mud years knows rain doesn't make grain and if your a country like Brazil where the crop is two to three weeks late and now it's starting to really rain like an inch or two every morning you have serious problems starting.
Some states are 50% damage on the soy crop due to sprouting and mud.
The bigger problem is corn usually goes in after the beans and guess what we all know how much fun it is to seed into the mud.
Mud is a dud.
So maybe when the market experts are talking a big blow upcoming in March on prices just a little heads up they know the situation down south and supply will be limited for quality.
So the last in your bins has a worth.
Some states are 50% damage on the soy crop due to sprouting and mud.
The bigger problem is corn usually goes in after the beans and guess what we all know how much fun it is to seed into the mud.
Mud is a dud.
So maybe when the market experts are talking a big blow upcoming in March on prices just a little heads up they know the situation down south and supply will be limited for quality.
So the last in your bins has a worth.
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