U.S. Soybean Supply and Use
Recent Report Data
AUGJULAUG
USDAUSDAUSDA
20-2121-2222-2323-2424-2525-2625-26
Planted Area (M Acres)83.487.287.583.687.183.480.9
Harvested Area (Acres)82.686.386.282.386.182.580.1
Yield (Bu/Acre)51.051.749.650.650.752.553.6
Supply
Beginning Stocks (M Bu)525257274264342350330
Production4,2164,4644,2704,1624,3664,3354,292
Imports20162521252020
Supply,Total4,7614,7374,5694,4474,7344,7054,642
Use
Crushings2,1412,2042,2122,2852,4302,5402,540
Exports2,2662,1521,9801,7001,8751,7451,705
Seed1011027275707373
Residual-454144293734
Use, Total4,5044,4634,3054,1054,4044,3954,352
Ending Stocks257274264342330310290
 
Stocks/Use Ratio5.7%6.1%6.1%8.3%7.5%7.1%6.7%
World Soybean Supply and Use
Recent Report Data
AUGJULAUG
USDAUSDAUSDA
(Million Metric Tons)19-2020-2121-2222-2323-2425-2625-26
Supply
Beginning Stocks114.6295.5398.6493.48101.78125.12125.19
Production341.43369.22360.45378.24396.93427.68426.39
Imports165.29165.50154.47168.56178.10186.06185.86
Use
Feed, Domestic312.66316.04316.51315.60331.01367.71367.71
Total Domestic360.00364.80366.03366.70383.69425.17425.10
Exports165.82165.18154.43171.79177.81187.63187.44
Ending Stocks95.53100.2693.09101.79115.31126.07124.90
Stocks/Use Ratio26.5%27.5%25.4%27.8%30.1%67.2%29.4%

Highlights

SOYBEANS:
U.S. soybean production for 2025/26 was 4.292 billion bushels, compared to the average estimate of 4.374 billion and a range of 4.29 and 4.45. The July estimate was 4.335 billion. Yield was 53.6 bushels/acre, versus an average pre-report estimate of 53 bushels/acre. U.S. ending stocks for 2025/26 came in at 290 million bushels, compared to 358 million expected (range 310-440 million) and down from 310 million in July. Harvested acres were reduced to 80.1 million, down from 82.5 million in July. The 2024/25 ending stocks estimate is 330 million bushels, compared to 349 million expected (range 305-390 million) and 350 million in July. World ending stocks for 2025/26 were 124.9 million tonnes, compared to the expected 127.8 million and a range of 126.1-131 million tonnes, and down from 126.1 million in July. Brazil soybean production estimate for 2024/25 is 169.0 million tonnes, versus 169.6 million expected (range 168.8-173 million) and unchanged from July. Argentina's soybean production for 2024/25 was 50.9 million tonnes, versus 50 million expected (range 49-50.5 million) and higher than July.

PRICE OUTLOOK:
Old crop ending stocks were slightly below guesses, but new crop was significantly under expectations and below last month. The reduction in harvested acres partly offset the higher yield. Old crop exports and crush were increased, but new crop exports were lowered, likely due to uncertainty regarding China's demand. The report can be considered friendly, and post-report prices are seeing a bounce. However, until a China trade deal is in sight, rallies are likely to be limited in scope. But this report does raise the support floor due to tighter ending stocks than expected

Definition

The World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report is prepared monthly and includes forecasts for U.S. and world wheat, rice, and coarse grains (corn, barley, sorghum, and oats), oilseeds (soybeans, rapeseed, palm), and cotton. U.S. coverage is extended to sugar, meat, poultry, eggs, and milk. USDA World Agricultural Outlook Board analysts chair the Interagency Commodity Estimates Committees (ICECs) comprising representatives from several key USDA agencies. The nine ICECs- one for each commodity- compile and interpret information from USDA and other domestic and foreign official sources to produce the report.

The ICECs rely on Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) attaché reports and analysis of foreign commodity developments, Economic Research Service (ERS) domestic and foreign regional assessments, and National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) U.S. crop and livestock estimates. For domestic policy and market information, the Board relies on the Farm Services Agency and the Agricultural Marketing Service. WAOB and FAS use weather analysis and satellite imagery to monitor crop conditions. Additional private and public information sources are considered.

This broad information base is reviewed and analyzed by ICEC members who bring diverse expertise and perspectives to the report. To arrive at consensus forecasts, alternative assessments of domestic and foreign supply and use are vetted at the ICEC meetings. Throughout the growing season and afterwards, estimates are compared with new information on production and utilization, and historical revisions are made as necessary.

The WASDE reports a full balance sheet for each commodity. Separate estimates are made for components of supply (beginning stocks, imports, and production) and demand (domestic use, exports, and ending stocks). Domestic use is subdivided into major categories, for example corn for feed and corn for ethanol. Domestic use may be based on data from other Federal agencies: for example, U.S. wheat ground for flour, soybeans crushed for oil, and cotton mill use come from the Bureau of the Census. The demand side of the balance sheet may include a category for “residual” or “unaccounted” disappearance to balance known uses against total supplies.

The WASDE also reports forecast season-average farm prices for most items. Prices tie together both sides of the balance sheet. Market prices aid in rationing available supplies among competing uses. Prices also indicate potential supply responses, for example potential planting decisions for the upcoming year. The process of forecasting price and balance sheet items is complex and involves the interaction of expert judgment, commodity models, and in-depth research by USDA analysts on key domestic and international issues.

Description

These reports present US and world supply/demand outlooks for a wide variety of agricultural products, including grains, oilseeds, cotton, pork and beef. They represent an accumulation of data on production and usage and offer projections for current/upcoming the marketing year.

The reports are released monthly, but the estimates are not necessarily revised every month. For the US data, production numbers tend to be revised during the growing season and into harvest, while demand numbers tend to be adjusted once the harvest is in and the products are marketed. The world data is adjusted every month because the data comes from many countries around the world.

Analysts focus primarily on each year’s ending stocks, as that provides a picture of whether supplies will be “tight” or “ample” at the end of the year. However, as production and consumption have been on a long term growth path for several decades, stock levels that may have been considered “ample” in years past may not be so anymore. With that in mind, analysts often prefer to use the stocks/usage ratio as a way of taking into account long term growth trends.

The world data covers individual countries as well as the entire world. Special attention is paid to the key producers, exporters and consumers. Brazil and the US together represent about 70% of global production and 85% of exports. The US, Argentina and Brazil represent 70% of global corn exports. Wheat is grown all around the world, with the US, Argentina, Australia, Canada, EU, Russia and Ukraine all major producers. India is the world’s largest producer of cotton, but the US is by far the largest exporter.

Traders will also want to keep in mind that marketing years vary from crop to crop, coinciding with the harvest. For example, wheat’s marketing year runs from June through May, cotton’s from August through July, corn and soybeans from September through August, and soybean meal and soybean oil from October through September (one month after soybeans).

The WASDE report also covers US meat production and consumption, including beef, pork and poultry. Annual production, consumption, export and stocks data is presented in the report, similar to the field crops. But this report also presents quarterly production data, which is of interest to cattle and hog traders, who track quarterly changes and compare them to previous years to gain insight as to whether the supply setup in upcoming quarters.
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