After the September 2025 report, there was no October report released due to the government shutdown, leading to a much-
anticipated November report after the shutdown had ended.
“Probably the biggest number the trade was looking for was the national average corn and soybean yields,” said Joe Janzen, University of Illinois ag economist.
The November report showed lower national yield estimates, although not as much lower as many analysts expected, he said. In short, the crop potential faded late in the growing season, but not by an enormous amount in terms of the national average.
“They lowered their corn yield estimates, but by less than
1 bushel per acre, from 186.7 bushels per acre to 186 bushels per acre,” Janzen said. “Soybean yield dropped from 53.5 to 53 bushels per acre.”
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