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Farm Animals Care Coalition of Tennessee (FAACT) Newsletter – Volume 1

The first edition of The FAACTs newsletter is available by clicking the link below.

The July 2012 Edition Features:
-Drought Area Larger Than Last Year
-Transport of Wild Appearing Hogs
-FAACT Missions
-Who Is the Humane Society of the United States?
-Humane Society Pressures Restaurants
-Cracker Barrel
-National Pork Producers Council on Food Companies’ Decisions on Sow Housing
-Domino’s Pizza says “NO” to HSUS
-Bank of America Partners with Humane Society of the United States

FAACT Newsletter Volume 1

By |2012-07-12T15:38:09-05:00July 12th, 2012|FAACT|0 Comments

** AgResource AM Grain Analysis & Market Comment ** July 6, 2012

AgResource producer sources suggest that US corn and soy conditions/yield potential have dramatically declined this week with corn not unfurling in the overnight cooling and ears that have no silks to be pollinated. Soybeans have stopped growing and are wilting under the afternoon heat. Another 3-5% decline in corn/soy GD/EX ratings is forecast for Monday with US corn yield potential now under last year’s 147 BPA. ARC argues that US 2012 soybean yield potential is under 40 BPA – and in fast retreat as larger share of the soy crop blooms.
The Central US forecast is little changed from prior days with the searing heat to relent across the Midwest on Sunday. Unfortunately, the chances for a soaking rain are poor over the next 10 days. A “ring of fire” weather/rain pattern will prevail for the next 3-4 days with showers arcing over the top if a high pressure Ridge. Rains are slated for the W and N Plains, MN, WI and MI and southeast through the Ohio Valley. Totals will range from .25-1.00”.
To the south (vast majority of the Midwest) rainfall totals are estimated in a range of .1-.6” with the frontal pass – with coverage pegged at 60-65% of
the area on Sunday/Monday. Such rain falls well short of crop needs or the ability to restore soil moisture.
Next week’s forecast calls for seasonal temps with highs ranging from the
80’s to the lower 90’s. Little or no rainfall is forecast for the Midwest as a front will be stalled across the lower Delta and the Gulf States with rainfall potential of .4-1.50”. A dry flow will persist across the Midwest into July 17
The Indian monsoon will continue to sputter for the next 10 days which is harming the soybean and ground nut crops. Crop worry is on the rise.
Without a soaking rain, any break in CBOT prices will be short lived/shallow.

By |2012-07-06T09:02:24-05:00July 6th, 2012|Uncategorized|0 Comments

DTN Early Word Grains 07/02

DTN Early Word Grains 07/02 06:08
Grains Stage Solid Rally to Start July
Corn futures are higher on the electronic session at 6 a.m. CDT; soybeans
futures higher; wheat higher.
By Darin Newsom
DTN Senior Analyst
6:00 a.m. CME Globex: Corn 19 1/2 higher (Dec), Soybeans 14 1/2 higher (Nov),
Wheat 8 1/2 higher (Chi Sep).
CME Globex Recap: Grain contracts broke from the opening gate strong Sunday
evening with December corn moving almost 30-cents higher while November
soybeans jumped 28-cents higher. However, within a couple of hours both
contracts had given back about half of the opening rally. Support came from
weekend rains over parts of the Midwest that were less than needed and
forecasts for continued hot and dry conditions. Tight supplies are reflected in
no deliveries reported for corn, soybeans, or Chicago wheat.
OUTSIDE MARKETS: The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 277.83 points higher
Friday at 12,880.09. The overnight session saw the Dow Jones futures trade 5
points higher, indicating the market could see continued buying interest
Monday. Asian markets were mostly higher though the Nikkei was down 3.30 points
at 9,003.48. European markets were higher. The overnight crude oil market was
$1.67 lower at $83.29 while Brent crude was $2.28 lower at $95.52. The August
gold contract was $13.20 lower at $1,591.00 while the U.S. dollar index is
0.133 higher at 81.760. Soybeans at the Dalian exchange were higher while
Malaysian palm oil futures were also higher.

By |2012-07-02T11:59:39-05:00July 2nd, 2012|Uncategorized|0 Comments

NCBA Commends Senate On Passage Of 2012 Farm Bill

The U.S. Senate in a 64 to 35 vote passed the 2012 Farm Bill (S. 3240) today, June 21, 2012. The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) commended the passage of the legislation. NCBA Vice President of Government Affairs Colin Woodall issued the following statement.

“Like many of us who have a vested interest in this legislation (S. 3240), I was pleasantly surprised by the bipartisan efforts made to move this bill through the Senate very efficiently and without much partisan rhetoric. Both Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) and Minority Leader Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) should be commended for their leadership on this very important piece of legislation. Their transparency and willingness to listen to all vested interests was very refreshing for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and other like-minded organizations. NCBA stands firm in our commitment to support this legislation.

“Although the amendment process was certainly concerning in its early stages, all is well for cattlemen and women thanks to their outspoken grassroots advocacy. This legislation, as written, incorporates all NCBA priorities. Bottom-line, there is no livestock title, conversation programs – specifically EQIP (Environmental Quality Incentives Program) – are maintained and the research title is sustained. All this is done with more than $20 billion in savings to the American taxpayer.

“We support this legislation and will continue working with the House to ensure amendments that would interject the federal government into production agriculture are left out of the legislation or soundly defeated. As we focus our efforts on working with the House Committee on Agriculture to ensure another version of this legislation that is positive for cattlemen, I must stress the importance of family farmers and ranchers being engaged in this process.”

By |2012-06-22T15:38:26-05:00June 22nd, 2012|Uncategorized|0 Comments

Uncertainties abound —

Grain traders headed into the weekend trying to decipher how much benefit crops would get from
forecast rains. The system appeared as if it would be a “major” event earlier last week, but ahead of the weekend, many private forecasters
had removed much of the rain potential for the driest areas of the eastern and southern Corn Belt. All investors are holding their
breath waiting on results from the June 17 Greek elections. While neither party has promised an exit from the euro-zone if they are victorious,
the opposition leftist party opposes the austerity measures Greece must adhere to in order to get bailout funding and avoid
defaulting on sovereign debt. But if Greece leaves the euro-zone, central bankers around the world appear ready to provide liquidity for
banks and economic stimulus. With the focus on weather and Greece — two very unstable and unpredictable factors — price action could be very volatile this week. Barring a macro-economic meltdown, livestock traders are trying to focus more on cash fundamentals.

By |2012-06-15T15:37:18-05:00June 15th, 2012|Uncategorized|0 Comments
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