
Market to Market - March 14, 2025
Season 50 Episode 5030 | 24m 45sVideo has Closed Captions
Commodity market analysis with Don Roose.
On this edition of Market to Market ... Tariffs continue to dominate the world economic discussion. Making another attempt at defining waters of the U.S. Getting help from a small insect to battle a big problem in corn country. And, commodity market analysis with Don Roose.
Market to Market is a local public television program presented by Iowa PBS

Market to Market - March 14, 2025
Season 50 Episode 5030 | 24m 45sVideo has Closed Captions
On this edition of Market to Market ... Tariffs continue to dominate the world economic discussion. Making another attempt at defining waters of the U.S. Getting help from a small insect to battle a big problem in corn country. And, commodity market analysis with Don Roose.
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Tariffs continue to dominate the world economic discussion.
Making another attempt at defining waters of the U.S.. Getting help from a small insect to battle a big problem in corn country and commodity market analysis with Don Roose, next.
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This is the Friday, March 14th edition of Market to Market, the Weekly journal.
Of Rural America.
Hello, I'm Paul Yeager.
The story of tariffs has replaced inflation as the feature in nearly every newscast of local and national origin.
The economic snapshots are starting to reflect the threats, actions and consequences of decisions involving taxes on goods coming in and out of America, as well as the spending and business operations in this country.
This month's consumer price index revealed inflation pressures eased.
The monthly gain was 2/10 of a percent, and the year over year slowed to only 2.8%.
The producer price index was flat on the month.
The year over year number moved to 3.2%, down half a percent from January's reading.
The S&P 500 entered into a correction as it has dropped 10% since its February 19th peak.
The Federal Reserve will look at these data points and other inputs for guidance on their next decision on the key interest rate.
Not lost on anyone is the talk of tariffs, which has become a daily occurrence as countries near and far from the U.S. launch higher import duty taxes on each other.
But the impact on those who depend on shipping goods out of the country are stuck in the middle.
Peter Tubbs has more on.
The daily tariff gyrations from the Trump administration are concerning some sectors of the agriculture industry.
New tariffs on steel and aluminum were announced this week, resulting in counter tariffs on American goods shipped to the European Union and Canada.
The tariffs are expected to raise costs for many Americans manufacturers.
Almond growers in California are bracing for price declines as the world reacts to new tariffs.
The almond industry saw wholesale prices drop 30% as a result of tariffs during the first Trump administration.
While domestic almond production has declined since the 2020 crop year, the percentage of the crop that is exported has increased to over 70%.
Almond growers are concerned their product will be targeted at a time when production costs have increased.
Right now, the producers aren't covering costs.
The price will fall even further and you'll see orchards being ripped out, farms being lost.
There will be farms for sale up and down the valley.
The European Union has proposed a 20% tax on American whiskey that will take effect on April 1st.
Trump countered with the threat of a 200% tariff on European wine and spirits at Brough Brothers Distillery in Kentucky.
The tariff situation has put plans to export their whiskey to Canada and the EU into uncertain territory.
Pretty much suspended indefinitely.
Now we have tariffs today and tomorrow.
We don't have tariffs.
We literally it takes us about 30 days to prep a product is shipped to wherever it's going.
Kentucky produces 95% of the world's bourbon supply.
And the Hypercompetitive sector relies on exports for continued growth.
Retaliatory tariffs can have a chilling effect on the industry.
Tariffs are paid by importers of goods and the costs are commonly passed on to consumers from Market to Market.
I'm Peter Tubbs.
Last week, the Supreme Court brought to an end another case deciding who was responsible for surface water quality.
The High Court ruled the Environmental Protection Agency had no authority to impose certain restrictions on water discharge.
The decision called into question again how the EPA will be able to regulate water pollution under the Clean Water Act.
David Miller reports on the next course of action by the Trump administration.
On the subject of water quality.
EPA Administrator Lee Zelden, as part of making what he called the largest series of deregulatory moves in the history of the United States opened the door to revising the controversial waters of the United States rule.
Our goal in going through this process is not to be an activist in going through a procedure.
This is to simply follow the rule of law.
EPA officials will start their review by getting input from stakeholders that include many who Zelden says were sidelined during the Biden administration.
Zelden is directing his team to put a focus on clarity, simplicity and improvements that will stand the test of time.
The wotus rule was finalized in 2015 at the end of the Obama administration.
Of the legal attempts to further define the rule.
One case, Sackett versus the EPA, ended up in front of the Supreme Court in the 2023 High Court ruling.
The ability of the EPA to enforce certain parts of the 1972 Clean Water Act was greatly reduced.
The National Cattlemen's Beef Association and the American Farm Bureau Federation came out in support of the review and restructuring effort.
Listening sessions are planned over the next few months for Market to Market.
I'm David Miller.
What started as research in the fields of New York has come to the Corn Belt and helped pull a thorn from the side of growers.
Rootworm.
Keegan Shields, his father, made a career in academic research following his own military career, Keegan picked up what is now become the family business based right in the middle of corn country.
The big idea and problem starts with a tiny natural creature.
This conversation is part of a recent MTM podcast and is our cover story.
Yeah.
so, Corn Rootworm was the focus of a lot of that research.
And in the summer, you go dig corn roots to kind of score, the roots.
So you've got to go dig all these things up.
his his lab also took about half a million soil samples, over the life of the technology.
So, helping out with that.
Persistent bio control is the name of the company, and it's it's you.
You're it.
What?
Why?
The name and and why do this on your own?
Why not go work for somebody that's already kind of in this field, doing what you're doing?
We sell, these microscopic worms called nematode.
they live in the soil, and they they attack soil, insect.
and that was the, the solution for this invasive pest that's only in northern New York.
it's only in four counties.
it's what my father worked on for 30 years.
These nematodes will will seek out soil, insect pests, kill them and then reproduce.
So it's this really cool, natural, self-replicating system that we've figured out how to harness for farmers.
It's only four counties in New York, I believe.
Last time I.
Let me look at my notes here.
Yeah.
root worm is everywhere.
So what's different about, those four counties in New York versus the rest of the area?
So, he kind of my father kind of stumbled on to the fact that this works in rootworm.
The original research is for a different insect.
But once we figured out said, oh, we could help farmers across the Midwest with root worm problems.
now it's I think it's something worth commercializing.
So there's there's there's a lot of different soil insects that these microscopic worms will, will go after and control.
we have a seven year continuous study in root worm, basically looking at control through rotation and, and, after going after root worm.
So corn's really our first market that we're going into.
it's what we're most familiar with.
But, it's really just the first market.
Corn in Texas and the way it's grown.
And even I shouldn't just say corn, but some crops in some states, there is no rotation.
It is the same thing year after year after year.
When you mentioned rotation, does it mean something different down there than it does, where you're seeing it's, seated today?
Yeah, a lot of, a lot of the farmers we work with are corn on corn for going back 20 years.
Right?
They don't they don't rotate.
And that's really stressed out.
but put a lot of pressure on the rootworm traits that that are the current solution.
the farmers in New York are mostly dairy farmers.
so it's, four year alfalfa, corn rotation.
So it's a little easier.
But.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, we work with some guy that Nebraska and and, northern, southern Minnesota that I think a big corn on corn for like 50 years on irrigation or, you know, rain fed.
So and a lot of the guys we work with are, they're corn on corn because they're feeding some type of livestock.
Right.
So I think they're, they they couldn't afford not to, to rotate.
So rootworm traits you mentioned that is sometimes in, in the trade of the seed to, to get rid of the rootworm.
Yeah.
It's, the current solution.
the seed companies have figured out how to insert a gene from a bacteria into the corn plant so that the the plant produces, bt toxin, which is not is harmful to rootworm.
what we're seeing are widespread resistance to these toxins.
So we've we've, listeners may be familiar with herbicide tolerant weeds, insecticide tolerant, insects.
And now we've got, these trait tolerant rootworm.
there's been a big shift over the last five years.
Five years ago, we had trouble, getting people to admit there was a problem, but, but, you know, people were kind of hush hush about it.
but now I think it's gotten more widespread.
The problems worse.
So it's really about using every tool in the toolbox, to try and control rootworm.
And that's what the nematodes really provide, is they'll come in as an independent, mode of action and, and kill off all those resistant survivors, that would normally make it to adulthood and cause more, rootworm pressure and damage.
And it's something that, you only have to apply once.
Once over.
How long?
So our data goes back 30 years.
so, you know, the lawyers won't let me say forever, but, you know, a long time, more than more than one year, which, again, that starts to make us sound a little snake oily.
Right.
but we've got we've got the data, and, I think this year we crossed 100,000 acres, have been treated with these persistent nematodes.
about 65,000, are in New York.
And the rest across the Midwest.
The full MTOM is available now.
Next, the Market to Market report.
The USDA report left no change in the balance sheets.
And the market returned to Tariff and Weather Watch.
For the week, The nearby wheat contract dated added $0.06 and the May corn contract fell $0.11.
The soy complex is dealing with some pressures from EU tariffs and vegetable oils.
The maize, soybean contract lost $0.09, while May meal added $1.50 per ton.
May cotton expand at $1.30 per hundredweight.
Over in the dairy parlor, April class three milk futures added a quarter.
The livestock market was mixed.
April cattle put on $2.90, April, feeders improved $3.05, and the April lean hog contract cut $0.72.
In the currency markets, the U.S. dollar index shed 19 ticks.
April crude oil found $0.09 per barrel, Comex gold gained $81.70 per ounce, and the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index subtracted more than three points to settle at 549.75.
Joining us now is regular market analyst Don Roose.
How are you doing Don.
Doing great.
Thanks for having me back Paul.
When we started the week.
Well, we start any week.
It seems to be by the time we get to Friday, the story changes dramatically.
Wheat is the one that was probably the most impacted by the USDA report, but that wasn't the biggest impact on the on the commodity.
What was the biggest mover for you and wheat this week?
Well, you know, I think number one, I think the wheat market, it's the wrong time of year to be overly bearish when you're starting to worry about the weather, particularly when the funds are, short, a big short in the market and we have some dry weather concerns around.
So, you know, the wheat market, I think it just bouncing back, showed his true colors reacting not that negative to, negative report.
But it was influenced a little bit by corn this week too, right?
Well, you know, I think some of it goes back to the last spreading going on.
The trade has been really heavily long the, corn market, heavily short, the, wheat market.
And I think to end the week with the concerns is kind of people scrambling back to home base.
And, you know, you can't say enough about with the tariffs going on.
Paul, I think you have to kind of think of it and trade it kind of like a mini weather market.
Do you trade corn like a mini weather market too?
Yeah.
I think, you know, if you look at a weather market, you know, you don't know what the next weather forecast towards the next move is going to be.
So you just have to kind of prepare yourself accordingly.
You know, technically.
And I think that's what's going on.
I think that's the way you look at these tariffs.
You know, treat it like you're in a weather market and that said we got the weather ahead of us.
So no short of volatility ahead as.
We record this.
We're about to have a little system that could cause some moisture in the plains.
Some snow in other places.
We're getting to that spring planting season where we're watching.
But let's talk specifically about corn.
I'm very curious, are we at a point right now where technicals have taken over from fundamentals in determining corn?
Well, I think when you look at the technicals, really give you the price direction where you're really at.
It'll add and subtract premium pretty fast.
The fundamentals I think we know on the corn market or for the most part kind of positive.
And that's why we went up to 5.21 and one half on corn.
You know, we just kept marching to the upside.
And then we ran into a lot of tariff headaches and we had the liquidation.
But no doubt the funds wanted to be long.
The positive one on the green, corn and on cattle.
So I think that's what you're looking at.
We'll talk about the funds because I'm curious about them and soybeans as well.
But when it comes to new crop corn, I'm sorry, old crop corn, if you have an empty the bin.
Have you missed that opportunity, do you think?
Well, I think when you look at it from a marketing standpoint, you know, opportunities come and go.
And, you know, we did have a pretty big run, to the upside.
5.21 and a half.
Those are only numbers you could have dreamt up in the fall when we were talking about.
So hopefully we get another run.
That was, one big one, you know?
So you got to take advantage of your opportunities when they're there.
Now we're on a big pullback.
And, you know, the bottom line is you ran into a tariff problem and pushed us down.
Well, let's talk tariffs.
If we could Phil in Ontario Canada who we've been watching the discussion a lot with what's going on with Canada and Mexico.
He asks on X: Tariffs and talk of tariffs.
Plus good South American weather have dimmed what look now to be a good grain marketing opportunity.
Do we now rely on traditional seasonality in late spring for the next good marketing opportunity?
Well I always look at marketing is kind of like a card game.
You know, you have to, you know, as the cards come out, you'll know what you're going to do.
And I would say, on the positive side, you're probably down to some weather skiers that we usually get.
We usually add risk premium into the May timeframe.
So, I would anticipate we're going to get, weather, premium added back.
It's just a matter from what level.
But right now, we right now we have a spike bottom in the July corn at 4.51 and a quarter.
So at least you have a tradable bottom.
If we can get the right card to come out of the deck and push is to sum up signals.
What is the deck telling you about the soybean trade?
Well, the soybean market, you know, is the, the best of the worst.
You know, it's holding, $10.
it's dialed in a lot of negative news.
A big soybean crop in Brazil.
fairly big crop in Argentina.
But we have the acre battle ahead of us.
And I think the March 31st, probably going to show that big down acres on new crop corn, and vice versa on the, on soybeans and corn, big, acres there.
So I think the soybean market certainly has, a lot of downside potential if the wrong thing happens.
you know, could you go at or under nine is very possible with the fundamentals.
Remember China is our big buyer, and we're having some, pretty tough, talks with them.
So is it still the case that tariffs are influencing the soybean trade?
The most of the three commodities we talk about?
All the commodities, I think is corn and soybeans are the most have the most negative influence on.
So the wheat market to a lesser degree.
So yeah, I think soybeans, you know, when you have the big crop coming out of Brazil, when you have, that's the supply side, the demand side is very shaky in a 380 million carryout is, not really a positive.
So.
But you can shrink those chemicals pretty fast with weather, Paul.
Let's talk about weather in South America then, because in Argentina and Brazil, a couple of different stories about the weather differences there.
How's that influencing us here?
Well, I think when you look at Argentina, they basically I think they have the wet, dry weather behind them.
It's improved greatly.
The Rosario Exchange took the production down.
Probably doesn't go down anymore.
Probably goes up from here.
So I think when you look at it, remember Argentina sells about exports about 1.4 billion bushels of corn.
you know, their harvest is going on right now pretty aggressive.
So that's coming at us.
Interesting though I think a lot of that corn goes into Brazil, Brazil this week.
Drop their import tariff to zero.
And so they must want Argentine corn waiting for the second corn crop.
So I think it tells us that there's a little bit of world demand in South America.
For the cattle market.
The dollar helped it early.
But what helped it late this week to rally.
Well, you know, quite a surprise.
I mean, it looked like we had cattle going to trade.
You know, 198.
And at the end of the week it was, a ratchet up trading cattle as high as 206 late, you know, big move in the, in the cattle that pushed the futures market up.
Still have a key reversal in October.
Cattle on back and live cattle and feeder cattle key reversal.
So next week is going to be a big jump ball.
Does a technical lead us to the downside or can we gather to the upside on the fundamentals?
Well, the fundamentals of the feeder market were about tariffs and there was the amount of what we we're not it's going to cost too much to import cattle into this country.
Is that going to override what you're talking about.
Well I think this is something I think the bottom line, when you look at all this, you can go back and forth on some of these things, Paul, but you know, the bottom line is, is going to be the demand.
We've talked about the supply tight for a long time gets tighter for this reason.
But there comes a point at the upside at what what price do does a consumer just, resists the purchasing?
And, you know, I think there's a real fear that we could go into a recession.
And there's talk, late this week about some of the budget stores that, lower income, I think it's under 40,000 have pulled back their spending.
Is that the class?
the income that's going to influence maybe some of this livestock market?
I think that's exactly right.
I mean, the top tier of people can only eat so much beef, you know, so that is left for the rest of the people.
So I think it's, you know, watch it close because there's certainly other proteins that are, cheaper, you know, and, and stuff, well, you know, what goes up does come down eventually.
We know that.
I mean, look at the price of eggs.
All right.
Well, exactly.
And the we had a sell off in hog market there, recently, but is that a I think I read something about that.
Maybe that's a risk off situation there.
Is that what's going on with the hogs?
Well, the hog market I think is most influenced by the export.
25% of our pork is exported.
So you know, and Mexico is our biggest buyer.
So that's the concern.
And I think no doubt when we had the big tarrif fight March 4th, hogs were pasted down over $4.
You know, that's the same day corn put in a spike bottom hogs put it in its spiked bottom.
Then things kind of, you know, normalized, if you will call it normalization.
So, yeah, the hog market on its own, I think was shaky up over 100, 105.
And I don't need any more help on the negative side.
All right.
Well, I hate to leave it on that, but we have to thank you, Don.
Thank you.
Paul.
Alright, Don Roose, everyone.
And we are going to pause the analysis, continue our discussion about these markets in our Market plus segment, you can find both analysis and plus on our website of markettomarket.org.
Finally, a thank you to all who've made pledges of support to this and other public TV stations.
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Next week, we are taking an experiment in cover crops to the next level.
Thank you so much for watching.
Have a great week!
Market to Market is a production of Iowa PBS, which is solely responsible for its content.
What's next?
Doesn't happen by chance.
It happens when researchers and farmers work together to solve tomorrow's agronomic challenges.
We're committed to creating what's next because at Pioneer, our name is our mission.
Family owned and operated for more than 60 years.
Sukup Manufacturing is a full service provider of grain handling, storage, and drying equipment, helping farmers feed and fuel the world.
For over 45 years.
Steiner Tractor Parts has shared your love of antique tractors.
New parts for old tractors.
Learn more at Steiner tractor.co Tomorrow.
For over 100 years.
We've worked to help our customers be ready for tomorrow.
Trust in tomorrow.
Information is available from a Grinnell Mutual agent today.
Video has Closed Captions
Don Roose discusses economic and commodity markets in this web-only feature. (11m 59s)
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