The prospects for corn, and increasingly, soybeans, continue to deteriorate, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which said in its latest report that corn in good-to-excellent condition as of Sunday stood at 24 percent and soybeans in the same condition were at 29 percent; both of them dropping 2 percent from last week.
This is the worst ratings of both crops since the devastating drought of 1988.
Even though there was some improvement is several states in the Midwest, the largest corn and soy producing states - Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska and Minnesota had their ratings drop from a range of 2-5 percentage points for corn and 3 to 4 percentage points for soybeans.
Corn has been hit so hard that it is rated 41 percentage point under the five-year average. At this time it's only 5 percentage points above the good-to-excellent rating it had during the same week in 1988.
The soybean rating was 34 percentage points under the five-year average and 10 percentage points over the same week in 1988.
There is little hope of relief in the next 10 days or so either, as less than an inch of rain in predicted throughout the period.
While the stress on the two crops have been slightly eased lately, they will continue to be under pressure going forward, according to agricultural meteorologists.
No soaking rains are expected, and the belief is both crops will continue to falter.
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