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The lower prices have occurred even as USDA lowered the 2011 production  forecast by more than 400 million bushels, suggesting that consumption  during the 2011-12 marketing year will be restricted and that year  ending stocks will be minimal. 
The price weakness reportedly reflects two basic fundamental factors.  First, early corn harvest results in some Midwestern locations have  uncovered “better than expected” yields.  These results suggest that the  USDA may not reduce the 2011 yield forecast below the current forecast  of 148.1 bushels, or perhaps could even increase the yield forecast in  October or November.  
Expectations of an unchanged or higher yield forecast along with  expectations of 1 September, 2011 inventories of old crop corn larger  than the current USDA forecast of 920 million bushels implies that corn  consumption will have to be reduced less than currently forecast.  The  second factor is the generally held view that corn demand has weakened.   Weaker demand implies that prices will not have to be as high as  forecast in order to reduce consumption. 
There is certainly precedent for a larger yield forecast in October  following a lower yield forecast in September.  From 1975 through 2010  (36 years) the USDA’s September forecast of the US average corn yield  was below the August forecast in 18 years, as it was this year. The  decline ranged from 0.1 bushels to 14.8 bushels (1983).   
Excluding 1983, the largest decline was 4.5 bushels (3.6 per cent) in  1995. The largest percentage decline, other than in 1983, was the 4.5  per cent reduction in 1976. The August to September reduction this year  was 4.9 bushels, or 3.2 per cent.  Of the 18 years when the September  yield forecast was below the August forecast, the October forecast was  above the September forecast in seven years. Those seven years were  between 1989 and 2008. In four of those seven years, the January yield  estimate was above the October forecast. 
The difficulty in evaluating observations that corn yields exceed  expectations is the issue of whose expectations?  The USDA recognises  that producer responses to its Agricultural Yield Survey, which is one  component of the monthly yield forecast, tend to be conservative (biased  down), particularly under drought conditions.   
The interpretation phase of the USDA’s yield forecasting process  recognises this tendency and factors it into the final deliberations of  the yield forecast. [See page 17 of “The Yield Forecasting Program of  NASS”, SMB Staff Report November SMB 06-01, May 2006].  This methodology  suggests that the September corn yiesld forecast may have captured a  portion of the yields that exceed producer expectations. 
Another complicating factor for anticipating the October corn production  forecast is the uncertainty about the magnitude of harvested acreage.  Planted acreage data released by the USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA)  reflects a larger difference between FSA certified acreage and the  survey-based planted acreage estimate of NASS than was the case in 2009  and 2010. This larger difference, along with the possibility that more  than the normal amount of acreage was harvested for silage or abandoned,  suggests that the NASS forecast of acreage harvested for grain will be  reduced in October. 
While considerable uncertainty persists on the issue of corn supply, the  market seems to be more focused on the demand side of the balance  sheet. The perception is that even with a slightly smaller crop  forecast, prices are high enough to limit consumption to the available  supply due to a downward shift in the demand for corn.   
Factors that have or may contribute to this shift include the  availability of lower priced wheat for the livestock sector, corn export  competition, the end of the ethanol blenders’ tax credit scheduled for  the end of the year, and the general economic weakness that may reduce  the overall demand for agricultural commodities. 
The October corn production forecast along with the estimate of 1  September inventories of old crop corn will solidify supply estimates  and quantify the magnitude of rationing required by the corn market.   After that, the pace of consumption will be monitored to determine if  the necessary reduction in consumption is occurring. Some evidence that  consumption is progressing too rapidly may be required to change the  recent trend in prices.   
Weekly export data, which currently show a slow pace of shipments but a  reasonable pace of new sales, provide the most visible information.   Weekly ethanol production data provide the most frequent information on  the pace of domestic consumption. Ethanol production in the first week  of the marketing year, for example, was about one per cent larger than  in the same week last year.   
The pace of domestic feed use is the least transparent. USDA reports of  livestock and poultry inventories will provide some basis for judging  overall feed demand. The magnitude of feed and residual use of corn,  however, will only be revealed with the quarterly Grain Stocks reports.























