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The report contains no new information that would affect consumers, Newsom said. "We have high prices and we've had high prices. Eventually those will filter into the grocery store," he said. The harvest began earlier than usual this year because the warm spring allowed planting a couple of weeks ahead of schedule. The early harvest has helped corn supplies exceed last month's estimate by 108 million bushels, putting them at 11.98 billion bushels. The USDA said about 11 percent of the crop was harvested prior to the Sept. 1 start of the 2012-2013 crop marketing year. That allows for about 1.2 billion bushels of new corn to be available before the end of the previous marketing year, helping alleviate some of the supply pinch. But globally supplies of corn remain tight and the major users -- livestock farmers, the ethanol industry and other countries importing it
-- will be forced to negotiate their level of use, a sort of market rationing that takes place in years of low supply. Soybean production was projected at 2.63 billion bushels in the report, down 58 million from last month's estimate due to lower yields in the Midwest. Soybean exports were reduced 55 million bushels to 1.06 billion mainly due to reduced supplies. Soybean ending stocks were projected unchanged at 115 million bushels, a nine-year low. As a result of sustained demand and low supply, soybean prices are expected to remain high. The USDA estimated the season-average soybean price to remain at $15 to $17 per bushel. Soybeans for November delivery hit a record high $17.89 last week. They were at $17.32 in morning trading.
[Associated
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