(Bloomberg) -- Wheat fell the most in two weeks in
Chicago as U.S. farmers begin harvesting a spring crop that may
yield more bushels than normal.
About 2 percent of spring wheat, grown mostly in the
northern Great Plains including North Dakota and Minnesota, was
harvested as of July 22. The government will update that figure
today. Some fields may yield as much as 95 bushels an acre, or
almost three times the five-year average, said Vince Boddicker,
manager of Farmers Trading Co. in Mitchell, South Dakota.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
Chicago as U.S. farmers begin harvesting a spring crop that may
yield more bushels than normal.
About 2 percent of spring wheat, grown mostly in the
northern Great Plains including North Dakota and Minnesota, was
harvested as of July 22. The government will update that figure
today. Some fields may yield as much as 95 bushels an acre, or
almost three times the five-year average, said Vince Boddicker,
manager of Farmers Trading Co. in Mitchell, South Dakota.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
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