
Market to Market - April 18, 2025
Season 50 Episode 5035 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Commodity market analysis with Jeff French.
On this edition of Market to Market ... Businesses work through a rapidly changing landscape on supply chains. Turning waste into an investment in your operation. And, commodity market analysis with Jeff French.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Market to Market is a local public television program presented by Iowa PBS

Market to Market - April 18, 2025
Season 50 Episode 5035 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
On this edition of Market to Market ... Businesses work through a rapidly changing landscape on supply chains. Turning waste into an investment in your operation. And, commodity market analysis with Jeff French.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipComing up on Market to Market, businesses work through a rapidly changing landscape on supply chains, turning waste into an investment in your operation and commodity market analysis with Jeff French.
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This is the Friday, April 18th edition of Market to Market, the weekly journal of Rural America.
Hello, I'm Paul Yeager.
This week featured tax day in the United States.
April 15th has long been a marker of procrastination, as filers complete their taxes just before the deadline, and it would appear shoppers were also sprinting before a tariff deadline to make some purchases.
Retail sales added 1.4% in March, the highest mark since January of 2023.
Analysts say the data underscores the uncertainty shoppers face as they try to get ahead of predicted higher prices due to new tariffs.
And some businesses tried to do the same and import some supplies for their operations.
Peter Tubbs looks at those efforts in this report.
This week, Americans continued to adjust to the economic ripples of President Trump's tariffs.
The Port of Long Beach, the country's largest port, is estimating imports through their facility will decline 20% by the end of 2025.
Our concerns about reduction, I think, are going to really start being elevated as we move towards May.
Our staff has now recorded 17 canceled sailings from the international carriers, which means less containers coming to the complex.
The port recorded its busiest January ever and volumes are currently up 27% over the same period of 2024.
Experts are unsure how much of the increase is being driven by importers, increasing orders ahead of tariffs, but the tariffs are beginning to affect import traffic.
They're turning around container ships that were headed our way and just saying just forget it, come on back.
It's likely that hundreds of container ships are coming every week or going to be much less, much less.
The tariffs on imports from Canada are adding uncertainty to the budgets of maple syrup producers in Vermont.
As the producer of 73% of the world's maple syrup.
Canadian companies are the main supplier of syrup processing equipment.
I've spent countless amounts of hours and lots and lots and lots of money in Canada, because they are the primary producers of high quality equipment.
Any kind of disruption with our cross-border enterprise, we feel it.
Judd has been making Vermont's signature agricultural product since 1978, and the fickle weather of the Northeast makes syrup a challenging business.
Judd is also dependent on a now tariffed global supply chain.
Our containers come from Italy.
There's now a new tariff on Italy, so we're sure our container price is going to go up.
The maple syrup industry in Vermont has seen dramatic growth over the past 20 years.
The number of sugar makers in the state has increased, and the volume of syrup has expanded five fold.
But the on again, off again nature of the Trump tariff makes planning difficult.
We are producing a luxury product that isn't necessary for your table.
It's something you like for your table.
So we can't just arbitrarily raise our price.
For market to market.
I'm Peter Tubbs An idea is just the start in business.
Then there's the need for strategy capital marketing, customer service, accounting and more to make it all work.
You'll have inputs to help make products and invariably waste.
Turning what is perceived as waste into profit, well, that's resourcefulness and could do more than just help the bottom line.
Josh Bittner looks at a process that's helping the environment as well.
In this week's cover story.
For the state of California, taking a bite out of climate change is a high priority.
In recent years, more legislation has sought to bolster long time efforts across the board and for some, solidified the notion that one person's trash could be another's treasure.
I think the landfill industry has a vested interest in seeing, better opportunities for the use of the methane we generate.
It's definitely a fact that California does typically set the standard, and then other states follow.
in the successive years.
Merced County Regional Waste Management Authority Director James Moore says his Central Valley utility, now annually diverts 25,000 tons of green waste material.
They would have previously buried.
Subterranean decay does act as a carbon sink.
But anaerobic conditions underground also produce volatile methane, a greenhouse gas 28 times more potent at trapping heat in the atmosphere than CO2, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Under Senate Bill 1383, approved by former governor Jerry Brown in 2016 and in effect as of 2022, residents and businesses are required to compost food and other organic waste in utility provided carts.
The goal is a 75% reduction in entombed organic waste by 2025.
The action has opened the door for contractors in jurisdictions like Merced County to not only produce compost commodities for landscaping and soil development, but capitalize on existing mitigation systems.
For the last 2025 years or so, landfills have put in, based on regulations, methane collection systems.
In the last 20 years, it's become quite economical to capture that gas and use it either for energy generation or under the new regulations.
Today, renewable fuel standards, rather than just environmental control, burning it off or burying it.
So there's an economic advantage to being able to put in these power plants or conversion plants and transfer them that methane into a renewable natural gas that can either be injected into the pipeline and use just like natural gas, or be used to create fuel.
The renewable Fuel Standard has benefited U.S. corn growers by requiring a percentage of biofuels, like ethanol, be blended into the nation's fuel supply.
But the federal mandate also covers bio gas, a cellulosic or next generation source, which also qualifies to generate renewable identification numbers, or RINs.
These credits are sold to major polluters, like the oil and gas industry, to keep their emissions in check.
California's low carbon fuel standard, a similar state program, may be stacked with RINs to provide a dual windfall, an enticing incentive for state at the forefront of the shift from gasoline to electric vehicles.
Some say biofuels can help bridge the gap.
I think there's a real opportunity for biofuels, largely because they can be stored.
If we shut down all the fossil fuel right now, the world would come to a screeching halt.
We would starve, we would freeze.
That's not the way we're going to be able to build a better world.
University of California, Merced said distinguished Professor Doctor Sarah Kurtz spent more than 30 years working at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado.
Her tenure in Merced has focused on integrating various energy sources to collectively drive down costs with a focus on choice, as opposed to government mandates.
California is definitely a leader there, doing some things very, very well.
I do want to raise a concern that one of the ways they've done it is to say we want to do it at whatever cost, and we end up then we have some of the most expensive electricity in the nation.
If electricity prices go sky hig UC Merced said.
Staff are tackling today's challenges from various angles.
This area where we are in the Central Valley, there's a lot of generation of biomass, not only in the Sierras for the forest, type of waste that is available, but also agricultural waste.
Doctor Gerardo Diaz says bio circular economies keep money on the farm and techniques like using livestock compost, bedding made from sterilized manure or solids can help cut methane and other objectionable byproducts.
We were able to show the there's a reduction in odor from the dairy production, so that really helps to improve the quality of life for some of the surrounding communities.
For instance, sometimes people don't consider those things, but we have a large community of people that are either rural or in disadvantaged communities or low income that are affected by some of these aspects.
Entrepreneurs who've worked with UC Merced are harnessing the rising tide of energy incentives to help float dairy operations of all size and scale.
It's not super sophisticated technology.
It's a.
Natural process.
You know, it doesn't get more simple than this.
It's a covered lagoon capturing the methane that is being released from the microbial activity within the manure.
Takes about 30 days for the biogas.
To be generated underneath the cover.
Aligned Digesters general manager Omar Ramirez says after purchasing the proper equipment.
Similar systems can generate power at $0.09 per kilowatt hour, as opposed to up to $0.22 from a local utility.
He adds this dairy in Chowchilla, which milks 6500 head feeds, has set up roughly 350,000 gallons of liquid waste daily, which can generate around two megawatts of power.
Net metering can further offset inputs, while even more potential remains.
On the plus.
Side, if you're doing renewable.
Natural gas, you could also power your.
Fleet on site to haul your milk to haul your feed.
It's really easy to really create a circular loop.
Critics charge this bevy of benefits encourages booming herds and exponential greenhouse gas, but Ramirez sees it as a hedge.
The dairy market is very volatile.
In our mind, it's dairy first.
And how are we going to help the dairymen generate that additional revenue stream while helping the environment and also putting a little bit more money in their pocket for the hard times.
For Market to Market, I'm Josh Bittner.
Next, the Market to Market report.
Better weather allowed for spring field work to be in high gear, as a lack of moisture added to the picture for the shortened trading week, the nearby wheat contract lost $0.07 and the May corn contract cut $0.08.
Soybeans were helped by the weaker dollar and improving crude oil prices, but the May soybean contract fell $0.06, while May meal declined $4 per ton.
May cotton expanded $0.48 per hundredweight over in the dairy parlor.
May class three milk futures added a dollars four.
The livestock market was higher.
June cattle improved $7.28.
May feeders put on $8.15, and the June lean hog contract increased $4.70.
In the currency markets, the U.S. dollar Index weakened 82 ticks.
May crude oil gained 2.79 per barrel.
Comex gold strengthened $76.50 per ounce, and the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index expanded by almost 20 points to settle at $538.45.
Joining us now, regular market analyst Jeff French, Hi Jeff.
How we doing, Paul?
Well, I'm okay.
I'm in the plains right now looking at the weather forecast.
Still dry, still hot.
Is that a factor now in this trade?
On the wheat?
Looking wheat.
It's going to be soon.
I mean, we're getting into, the season where it's very important and Kansas remains, awfully dry.
They've been dry for a long time, but it's it's wheat and wheat can come back from that.
So if they don't get any moisture or reduced moisture here in the next month, the wheats got a story.
But if you look at the action in the wheat, I mean, it just it just can't get anything going.
And you look at the three year low at the U.S. dollar, you would have thought we would have been a little stronger.
But I think you're seeing a kind of an inter commodity spread here.
We had a nice rally in corn and beans here the last couple of weeks.
they've used the wheat as that short leg.
but anytime the wheat gets going, it just gets undercut by the Black Sea.
I mean, they continue to undercut, the world values.
So still, the story that it's been that for several years, it's still the Black Sea story.
are there new buyers on the market with these trade challenges?
I mean, everybody seems to be sourcing things differently.
Has that come to the wheat pits yet?
It hasn't, but potentially.
I mean, we're we're expecting they're they've they've, you know, hinted that there could be some deals announced here as early as next week with Japan and the European Union.
So we'll have to see.
But yeah, potentially.
And I think that's what the market is.
The market this week was kind of in a pause mode.
You know, we had a lot of volatility the last couple weeks.
this week was definitely kind of a breather.
Sit back.
And producers were in the field.
So that reduced the volatility as well.
So if you're a producer are you sitting back and waiting right now?
You know I'm not selling wheat down here.
we'll put it on some protection on paper.
But I just think this wheat, it looks like it's found a bottom.
and with what potentially could happen and the weather, I would not be selling wheat out here.
So in corn, weather is quickly becoming a story for opposite reasons, right?
Eastern corn belt.
Supposed to get a lot of rain this weekend.
Western corn belt still supposed to be dry.
Rain was very isolated Thursday night in Iowa, across to Illinois.
Where's the weather?
When does the weather story become a story?
You know, I think the rain right now probably leans a little negative.
I mean, rain right now.
you know, helps us.
I mean, the soil needs a little recharge.
I think if you get, if you continue this wetness in the next month, it becomes a story.
But I think the rain right now, and especially next week, the market will take that as beneficial.
Also muted movement this week in corn.
Why?
Well, it had a big move.
It was up 10 out of the last, or, 8 or 10 out of 11 days.
The last two weeks.
that was a big move.
And then you had areas, especially along the river.
You had some of those July contracts that were paying $5 cash corn.
So I think you've seen a good rally.
Producers tend to reward good rallies.
I mean, we are taking advantage of it.
$5 corn from where we were at, looks awfully good.
Let's talk about December corn.
If we could, Phil.
There's the December corn contract.
Let's talk about Phil's question.
If we could year from Ontario.
And he wants to know, is there any scenario where December corn reaches $5 in 2025, or is it more or less plausible than beans in the teens?
Oh, there's a scenario.
I mean, we're not we're not that far away.
I mean, it feels like we're far, but, you know, we're going into the growing season.
and, you know, you go back to 2020, the intentions in 2020 were for 97 million acres of corn.
Okay.
We planted 92 million acres of corn.
So let's see what happens here during the next month.
Doing it actually 95 million acres in like we intended to?
We'll have to see.
But yeah, you reduce that that corn, acreage planted to 92 million acres and then you throw some weather into it.
We could be over $5 very easily.
Okay, quite the scenario there.
So let's say if I'm take old crop out of this new crop, am I doing any positions here starting next week?
Well, I think you got to put some targets in place.
I mean, we've come $0.35 off the lows.
you know, we're not looking to commit bushels right now in the physical market, but we'll we'll put some positions on paper right now.
but I think you got to have targets in every $0.20, $0.25, you know, stepped up you know, because we got big resistance up here at 480.
And if we do get the acres in the ground, I mean, there is a bear scenario down the road, down the road.
You know, where corn's planted.
You know, some is planted, but there's this there's been this shift to plant some places beans before corn.
So does that change the scenario of which market is more impacted by whether corn or soybeans early in the growing season?
Yeah, I think it is.
I mean, you're right.
I mean, the last five, ten years, it seems like everybody is switching to planting beans earlier.
Now, this year we actually did corn, first.
but yeah, I think it effects the bean market right now a little bit more with the wetness.
But again, you know, we're sitting here, it's April 18th.
It's awfully early still.
You know, talk to me here in the next month and see.
Well see where we're at.
Well let's talk about beans then.
Because that $10 mark was we didn't think we'd get back over it.
and here we are now, a couple of weeks above it.
Are we here to stay?
Well, I mean, the beans are interesting.
As soon as China announced tariffs, I mean, beans.
What did they do instantly?
Rally $0.75.
You know, the uncertainty in the market is really what scares these markets.
And once we kind of had some certain things that were known with tariffs coming from China and nobody else, that's when we saw the market take off.
So you know, you look at a bean chart I mean July up here at 1050 it's had a big rally.
We've we've got through 1050.
But we we didn't stay above it very long.
but also I just don't think there's too many old crop beans left in the producers hands.
I think it's in the commercials.
And so that's really when we can see it move higher.
but, you know, the beans have a story here with 80 to 83 million acres.
you throw a hot and dry August, you know, this bean crop, if it has any reduction in yield.
I mean, there could be definitely a story there.
But the story wasn't a story for the longest time.
People who sat in your chair for weeks would say, beans.
Don't look how I don't know.
It's it's not profitable.
It's not anything.
Again there's that.
I've already made my planting acre decision, but is there still a few people out there who might pull the trigger and plant beans instead of corn?
Possibly.
But I think Mother Nature would have to dictate that.
And it's just too early right now, for that scenario.
So maybe in the next 30 days we get late into May, we could see some maker switch.
Okay.
November.
on that, deferred on that, again, is this one of those that you have targets on paper that you need to put on to protect yourself?
Well, I mean, you know, to break even, most producers need about $11 cash beans right now.
So, you know, you have 1030 board.
Mine is the basis.
It's, you know, cash beans right now, probably 980 in most areas.
So, I think we're going to be patient here for the time being.
put some protection on paper.
but we'll wait till the growing season and see what happens here this summer.
You want to put any water on?
The rumor of China is now going to Brazil, and Brazil might run out of beans.
Is there anything to that story that we need to watch?
Potentially?
I mean, they had an excellent bean crop, but I mean, this is the time of the year where China is buying from Brazil.
Anyways.
so let's see what happens.
I mean, there there's going to be negotiations.
you know, we've had a trade where, you know, for 40 years, the U.S. just finally decided to join the battle.
So let's see what happens with these negotiations and hopefully they get some work down here.
Are we caught in trade at all with livestock, specifically cattle?
You know, I think the trade war benefits the cattle.
I mean, if we're not bringing in beef or the actual feeder cattle from Mexico or Canada, that helps our domestic price.
So, the cattle look good.
I mean, that, you know, 210 to 12 cash prices.
the cattle on feed report came out Thursday afternoon.
You know, maybe a slightly a little bearish just because the 105% places.
But the the numbers are going to remain tight.
And we're entering May and June is probably some of our tightest, time frame of this year.
but you look at the general economy, I just think, these prices are awfully expensive.
you know, I just, I think the downside protection here in the livestock, all proteins is a must right now.
The retail side of this has been talked about consumer when it either when it's pressured with with a job or with high prices.
It looks like now both of those factors at some point where does that, what's a signal that that is converging on livestock?
Yeah I mean box beef up here at 340.
I mean, you're absolutely right.
We were talking, you know, before the show, beef is noticeably higher.
the lot that in the last couple of weeks, but, you know, when does that happen?
You know, I think it's it's kind of a slow rolling, and we'll just have to see.
But yeah, you look at the general economy, you look at car sales and home sales.
I mean, those are at or near or below, you know, 2008 recession level.
So, the economy feels like it's kind of slowing here, no question about it.
And when that happens, what does live?
What does the box beef the cattle market normally do?
Oh, it moves lower.
I mean, the consumer will go to cheaper protein alternatives and there's much cheaper.
You know you got obviously the pork but poultry right now is awfully cheap.
Well yeah.
let's look at feed.
you mentioned, 98% on feed 105, placed 101 fed cattle, marketed what, one of those.
You kind of hinted a little bit of those.
Which one stood out to you the most?
It was the it was the placements.
Yeah.
it came over about 2.5% more than expected.
But we're coming off a month where the placements were down in the 80%.
So, you know, simply there's the tightness is going to continue.
It's going to be what the consumer demand does.
And technically, that chart has not held with history in this whole run up, Right?
This is more of a fundamentally driven story for feeders.
Absolutely.
And it's been a story that's been going on for the last ten years.
I mean, this cattle herd is small and it's producers getting out of the business, but also Mother Nature, the southwest of this country has been dry for the last decade.
Heck of a run up in, hogs this week to.
Seven days higher in a row.
I think you got to take advantage of it.
I mean, you have June right here.
right at 100 day moving average, right below 9970, right below $100.
That's big time resistance.
I can't stress that enough to get some downside protection here on the hog.
Is that because you see it as a trade story or a supply story or something else?
I think this correct.
It was a corrective bounce.
I just think, you know, again, it was kind of like the beans, once we once the hog market knew what China was going to do, we had that relief rally seven days higher in a row.
You don't see that very often.
Get some protection in place.
All right.
Let's look at crude oil for a minute.
And the dollar, because those are two other factors that are always at play.
You mentioned the the heck of a run down in the dollar, which usually is good for commodities.
But crude oil now has bounced back.
Which one of those two factors is the biggest story we need to be paying attention to?
Well, I think, you know, depending on, you know, from your input side, you know, obviously we want cheaper diesel.
so that's good to see.
But, you know, you have this dollar now below.
You know, it close it, I think nine 9919 for the week here.
you know, from a chart standpoint, this thing looks like it could go down to 92.
Time will tell.
But I think the main indicator will be is how long this trade war with China continues.
but, yeah, it's it's good to see that diesel prices have come down.
and I think this dollar could potentially work lower.
All right.
Good to see you, Jeff.
Thank you.
Paul.
Thanks for having me.
And happy Easter.
Happy Easter to you as well.
Thats Jeff French everyone, and I want to say that we're going to pause this analysis, but we're going to keep going and discuss these markets.
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Thank you so much for watching.
Have a great week.
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Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S50 Ep5035 | 9m 32s | Jeff French discusses economic and commodity markets in this web-only feature. (9m 32s)
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