Basis Brief
Most grain market commentary is written for traders, not for the elevator manager deciding whether to store or sell this week. The Basis Brief Agricultural Intelligence Series covers basis fundamentals, WASDE interpretation, and physical market structure in the practitioner language that country elevator operators, ag lenders, and feed mill managers actually use.
Basis Brief
Module 3 — USDA Data Sources
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The entire Basis Brief intelligence pipeline is built on free, publicly available government data. This episode covers the three USDA data sources that matter most — the WASDE, AMS Daily Grain Market News, and NASS Crop Progress — with enough precision that you can read each report the way a practitioner does, not the way a journalist summarizes it.
The WASDE section walks through the corn supply and demand balance sheet line by line. By the end of this discussion, you will be able to read a WASDE table, calculate what a yield revision means for total production, and understand why carryout — not the absolute price level — is the number that moves markets.
What this episode covers:
- What WASDE stands for, who produces it, and why it is the most market-moving scheduled government publication in agricultural commodities
- Walking the corn S&D table: Area, Yield, Beginning Stocks, Production, Feed and Residual, FSI (ethanol dominates), Exports, Ending Stocks
- Why a 1-bushel-per-acre national corn yield revision changes total production by 90 million bushels
- Carryout as a days-of-use calculation and why markets trade a risk premium when days of use fall below 30
- How AMS market reporters collect daily cash price data at hundreds of locations — and what geographic coverage gaps mean for your basis calculation
- NASS Crop Progress: what Good/Excellent percentage means, why the same rating means different things at different crop development stages
- Why the Crop Progress report matters more in late June than in September
- Operational note: how USDA data disruptions in 2025–26 affect pipeline design and fallback data sourcing
Basis Brief delivers automated weekly grain basis analysis and WASDE intelligence to grain elevator operators, ag lenders, and feed mill managers across the Corn Belt. Each Thursday digest synthesizes USDA AMS cash prices, CME settlement data, and WASDE revisions into a five-minute read — with regional basis context, historical comparisons, and a plain-language bottom line for physical operators.
The WASDE Flash is free. Subscribe at basisbrief.com.
This series was produced using Google NotebookLM from original research materials developed for the Basis Brief service. Audio content features AI-generated voices in a conversational format. All analysis and source material was developed by Basis Brief LLC.
Welcome back to the deep dive. I um I want to start today by asking you a question and I want you to just be totally honest with yourself for a second. When you think about the the masters of the universe, right?
SarahRight.
TomThe people who really pull the levers of the global economy, who do you actually picture?
SarahI mean, I think for most people the image is pretty standard. You picture a a boardroom at the Federal Reserve. Yeah, exactly. You picture Jerome Powell adjusting interest rates, or maybe uh a trading floor at Goldman Sachs, or even a server room somewhere in Silicon Valley where some AI is just deciding the fate of the stock market.
TomAaron Powell Exactly. We are so conditioned to think that the market movers are these people in suits watching Bloomberg terminals, obsessing over basis points, tech earnings, that kind of thing.
SarahOh, absolutely.
TomBut today we're gonna challenge that assumption entirely. We're gonna argue that there is a completely different set of market movers. Yeah. People who are arguably much more critical to our actual biological survival. And here is the kicker they are not watching the Fed.
SarahNo, they are absolutely not. They are watching the USDA.
TomThe United States Department of Agriculture, and I know what you're thinking, listening to this, you're thinking the USDA.
SarahRight, the meat inspectors.
TomExactly. The people who inspect meat and tell me to eat more vegetables on the food pyramid. It sounds incredibly bureaucratic. It sounds safe. Boring even.
SarahAaron Ross Powell It sounds totally boring until you realize that the data coming out of the USDA actually determines the price of the food on your plate, the solvency of the American farmer, the value of farmland across the entire Midwest, and frankly, whether or not certain import-dependent parts of the world actually go hungry.
TomAaron Powell The stakes are literally life and death. And yet the mechanisms are hidden behind these incredibly dry acronyms. And that is our mission today. We are unpacking module three of our source material. We're going to decode the Titans of agricultural data three specific reports: the WASD, the AMS market news, and the NAS crop progress.
SarahAaron Powell These are the heavy hitters. I mean, when these reports drop, we aren't talking about a gentle nudge to the market. We're talking about billions of dollars in inventory value that can just it can evaporate or materialize in milliseconds.
TomIt's volatile, it's high stakes. And honestly, reading through the sources, it's a little bit terrifying when you peel back the curtain.
SarahYeah.
TomBut what makes this deep dive so fascinating to me is that we can't just talk about the reports in a vacuum. Right. Because if you're just looking at the price of corn futures on a screen like the ticker scrolling on CNBC, you are missing half the story.
SarahAaron Powell You're actually missing the most important part of the story. Because if you talk to a grain operator, a farmer, an elevator manager, a lender, they will tell you that the futures price is almost irrelevant on its own.
TomAaron Powell Which is wild to think about.
SarahIt is, but the real story, the real profit engine of the agricultural world is something called the basis.
TomAaron Powell Basis. It's a word that comes up constantly in the research for this module. It sounds fundamental, and I guess it is, but it's also widely misunderstood. Our sources basically say if you don't get basis, you just don't get the market.
SarahYou don't.
TomSo before we get to the spy thriller security of the government reports, we have to build the foundation. We have to understand the lens through which we view this data.
SarahAaron Powell I think that's the perfect place to start. Because basis really is the ghost in the machine. It's the it's the invisible hand that actually physically moves the grain from a farm in Nebraska down to a port in New Orleans.
TomSo let's demystify it for everyone. In the absolute simplest terms possible, what is basis?
SarahIn its simplest form, basis is just a math equation. It's a relationship. Basis equals the local cash price minus the nearby futures price.
TomOkay. I want to slow down and anchor that because cash and futures get thrown around a lot in financial news. And I want to make sure we are all visualizing the exact same thing. Let's role play this.
SarahOkay.
TomI'm a farmer. Let's say I'm in central Illinois, right in the heart of the corn belt. I have a barn full of corn that I just harvested.
SarahOkay, you're the farmer. You look at your local grain elevator. You know those big concrete silos you see driving down the highway. And the big white ones. Right. You call them up and say, What will you pay me for my corn today? And they tell you we are paying $4.45 a bushel. That is the cash price. That is the literal physical check they will write you on the spot.
TomAaron Powell Got it. So the $4.45 is real money. It pays the tractor loan.
SarahCorrect. But then you open an app on your phone, maybe a trading app or a market news app, and you look at the Chicago Board of Trade, and the futures market says December corn is trading at $4.72.
TomOkay, so the paper price in Chicago, the global benchmark everyone talks about, is actually higher than what I can get in my hometown.
SarahRight. And that difference is the basis. So let's just do the math. $4.45, your cash price, minus $4.72, the futures price, equals negative 27 cents.
TomNegative 27 cents.
SarahOr as the industry practitioners say, 27 under.
TomSo my corn is literally worth 27 cents less than the Chicago benchmark. Now, the sources emphasized that basis is almost always negative in production areas.
SarahYes.
TomWhy is that? Why is my corn essentially discounted? Is it because my corn is lower quality or something?
SarahNo, it has absolutely nothing to do with quality. It's a reflection of friction, just physical reality. Because the futures contract in Chicago isn't just an abstract number floating on a screen, it represents a promise to deliver physical grain to a specific location. Historically that was Chicago, but now it's usually terminals along the Illinois River or up in Toledo.
TomOkay, so the price assumes the corn is already sitting there.
SarahExactly. But you are in central Illinois, or maybe you're way out in western Kansas. Your grain isn't at the delivery point, it's sitting in your barn. To get it to the delivery point, someone has to pay to put it on a truck, drive it to a river terminal, load it onto a barge, and literally float it down the river.
TomLogistics?
SarahLogistics costs money. Freight can be 20 to 50 cents a bushel, depending on where you are geographically.
TomSo the negative basis is basically just the shipping cost subtracted from the benchmark.
SarahThat's the biggest component, yeah. Freight. But it's not just freight. It also includes storage costs, insurance, handling fees because you have to run the belts and the grain dryers, and finally the elevator's profit margin. All of those costs get compressed down into that one single number.
TomThat is a really helpful way to visualize it. It's kind of like real estate. How so? Well, the listing price of a house might be one thing, but by the time you pay the agent, the closing costs, the taxes, your actual net cash in hand is lower. The basis is like the closing cost of the corn market.
SarahThat's a great analogy, precisely. So when you see a basis of 35 under in Iowa, that is the market's summary judgment of the logistical cost to move grain from Iowa to the world stage.
TomBut here is where the rabbit hole goes deeper. And this was the part of the research that really surprised me. For the grain elevator, the actual business buying my corn basis isn't just a cost to calculate, it's their entire business model.
SarahYes. This is the single biggest misconception about the ag industry. I think most people assume that a grain elevator is basically like a day trader.
TomRight.
SarahLike they buy your corn at 445, they hold it in the silo, they cross their fingers and hope the price goes up to five bucks, and then they sell it.
TomBuy low, sell high. That's how everyone makes money, right?
SarahNot in the grain business. If an elevator operated like that, they would be bankrupt in a year. They handle millions of bushels. If they bought a million bushels of corn and the global price dropped 50 cents overnight, they just lost half a million dollars. Right. The margins in agriculture are just way too thin for that kind of gambling.
TomSo they aren't speculators at all.
SarahNo, they are hedgers. And this is totally critical to understand the module. The second they buy your corn for $445, they turn around and sell a futures contract on the Board of Trade for $472.
TomThey lock it in immediately.
SarahThey lock it in. They are now totally neutral on the flat price of corn. If the price of corn goes to zero, they don't care. If it goes to $10, they don't care. They have hedged that risk away entirely.
TomSo if they don't care about the price of corn, how on earth do they make money?
SarahThey make money on the basis. Their gain their entire business is to buy the basis when it's weak, say 35 cents under, and then sell the physical grain later when the basis strengthens, say to 20 cents under.
TomOh, I see. So they are trading the spread.
SarahThey are trading the logistics and the time. If they buy at 35 under and sell at 20 under, they capture that 15 cent difference. That is their margin. That 15 cents is how they pay for the lights, the salaries, and the infrastructure. They live and die by the basis.
TomWhich brings us perfectly to the USDA reports. Because if the elevator manager's livelihood depends on whether that basis widens or narrows, they need data to predict it. They need to know if local supplies are getting tight, which strengthens basis, or if the world is flooded with grain, which weakens it.
SarahExactly. The basis tells you where the market is locally right now. The USDA reports tell you where the market is going globally tomorrow. If you don't watch the reports, you're flying blind. You're trying to navigate a hurricane without a radar.
TomSo let's meet the Titans. We've set the stage, we know why we care. Now let's talk about the data itself. And we are starting with the heavyweight champion of agricultural reports, the WASTE.
SarahThe WASDE. The World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates.
TomEven the acronym sounds incredibly heavy. And the sources describe the release of this report with an intensity that honestly sounds like a Hollywood spy thriller. They talk about lockups and confidentiality agreements. Is it really that dramatic, or is that just industry hype?
SarahOh, it is absolutely that dramatic. You really have to understand the sheer power of this document. This report is released monthly, usually the second Tuesday at noon Eastern. And for the team of economists compiling it, it is a total physical lockdown.
TomPaint the picture for us. What actually happens that morning in Washington?
SarahSo these economists enter a physically secured wing of the USDA building. We're talking armed guards at the doors, the blinds are drawn tight so no one can see in from outside. The internet is cut, phones are confiscated, smartwatches are removed.
TomLiterally cut off from the outside world.
SarahCompletely isolated. They're in a bubble. They have all the internal data streams coming in, weather reports, satellite imagery, export data from the ports, consumption data from ethanol plants, and they have to synthesize all of that massive data into a single balance sheet for the entire world.
TomBut why the extreme secrecy? I mean, why not just email it out as they finish sections?
SarahBecause the information inside that room is worth billions. Literally. If you knew the number five minutes before the rest of the world, you could leverage up on futures contracts and make an absolute fortune. We are talking about global price swings of 20, 30, 40 cents in seconds.
TomIt's insider trading prevention on steroids.
SarahIt is. It's the closest thing agriculture has to the Super Bowl. When the clock stretched noon, the report hits the servers, and the algorithmic traders go absolutely wild, the trading volume spikes, the charts go vertical, it's just chaos.
TomAaron Powell So the report drops. The chaos starts. But what are they actually looking at? I've seen these S and D tables in the source material, the supply and demand tables, and to the uninitiated, it looks like a wall of spreadsheets, just rows and columns of tiny numbers.
SarahAaron Powell It can be intimidating to look at, sure, but it follows a very simple accounting logic. Just think of it like a bank account for corn. You have supply on the left and demand on the right, and just like a balance sheet, they have to balance. They have to tell a story.
TomAaron Powell Let's break down the supply side first. What goes into it?
SarahSupply is really just two things. First, you have beginning stocks. That's simply whatever was left over in the grain bins from last year. The carryover.
TomOr leftovers.
SarahRight. And the second part, the really big part, is production. What did we actually grow this year? And this is where the drama lives, especially between June and November when the crop is still out in the ground.
TomBecause nature is unpredictable.
SarahExactly. Production is a function of two variables, acres and yield. How much land did we plant and how much corn are we getting per acre? That yield number of bushels per acre is the one that gives traders actual ulcers.
TomWhy is yield so sensitive? I mean, if the yield estimate changes from 180 bushels per acre to 181, does that really matter in a grand scheme?
SarahIt matters immensely because of the multiplier effect. The US harvests roughly 90 million acres of corn.
TomOkay.
SarahSo if the USDA changes their yield estimate by just one single bushel per acre, which sounds tiny, right? Just a rounding error.
TomIt sounds completely insignificant.
SarahBut multiply one bushel by ninety million acres. That is a ninety million bushel swing in total supply. That's a massive amount of physical grain suddenly appearing or disappearing from the balance sheet.
TomWow.
SarahThat's enough corn to fill a train stretching from Chicago to St. Louis. And that appears or disappears with the stroke of a pen in that locked room.
TomOkay, when you put it that way, I totally see why people hold their breath at noon. So a tiny tweak in the biologist's estimate changes the global supply picture instantly.
SarahInstantly. And that's just the supply side. Right. Then you have to look at the use or the demand side. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
TomRight. And the sources list three big buckets for demand.
SarahRight. Bucket one is feed, corn that's fed to cows, pigs, and chickens. That's fairly steady. Animals have to eat, and herd sizes don't change overnight. Bucket two is ethanol.
TomWhich is fuel.
SarahYes. About 35 to 40 percent of the entire U.S. corn crop goes straight into your gas tank. That's tied to driving habits, oil prices, things like that. And then bucket three is exports, sending it to China, Mexico, Japan.
TomAaron Powell, I imagine that one jumps around a bit.
SarahIt's the most volatile bucket because it depends on geopolitics, currency rates, trade wars, you name it.
TomAaron Powell So you take the total supply, you subtract the total use, and what's left over at the bottom is the holy grail of the report.
SarahThe number that everyone skips all the other pages to find, ending stocks, or as the practitioners call it, the carryout.
TomThe carryout. Why is this specific number the one that defines the market?
SarahBecause carry-out tells you your margin of safety. It tells you exactly how much cushion the world has. If the carryout is big, the market breathes a huge sigh of relief. It says we have plenty of buffer. If there's a terrible drought next year, we'll be fine. And prices tend to go down.
TomAnd if the carryout is small.
SarahAbsolute panic. If the carryout is tight, it means we are living hand to mouth globally. One bad weather event could mean actual physical shortages. So prices spike to ration demand, basically. The price goes up until someone decides they just can't afford to buy corn anymore and they drop out of the market.
TomBut the sources mention a specific rule of thumb here that I found really useful. Because a raw number, like 1.5 billion bushels, is super hard for a normal person or even a trader to really contextualize. Like, is that a lot? Is it a little?
SarahRight. Context is everything. So the pros convite that raw bushel number into time. They calculate days of use. The mat is simple. If we stopped harvesting today and just lived off what was sitting in the bins, how many days could we feed the world?
TomI love that metric. It makes it so visceral. It turns a boring spreadsheet into a literal survival clock. So what are the benchmarks for that? What's the danger zone?
SarahGenerally speaking, if carryout drops below 30 days of use, the market is tight, it's anxious. Basis will strengthen because buyers are fighting for every single bush hole. They can't afford to run out and shut down their plant, so they bid aggressively.
TomAnd the comfort zone.
SarahIf it's over 50 or 60 days, it's considered a soft market. There is a glut. Buyers can just sit back, relax, and offer low prices because they know the grain is out there. There's zero urgency.
TomSo 30 days is panic, 50 days is a party for the buyers anyway. For the farmer, I assume it's the exact opposite.
SarahExactly. And this brings us to the most important psychological concept of the WAST BIZA release, the surprise.
TomThe surprise. This isn't just about the number itself, it's about the expectation of the number.
SarahThe market is a prediction machine. It is constantly trying to price in the future. Before the report comes out, places like Bloomberg and Reuters survey every major analyst on Wall Street. They ask, what do you think the carryout number will be? And they average those answers into a consensus or a rumor.
TomSo everyone walks in on Tuesday morning expecting, say, a 1.5 billion bushel carry-out. That's the baseline expectation.
SarahRight. Now, if the USDA releases the report at noon and says, actually it's 1.5 billion, what happens?
TomNothing.
SarahBasically nothing. It's a confirmation, the market yawns, the price might wiggle a penny or two, but the news was already priced in. The market had already adjusted its spets for that reality.
TomBut if they say 1.3 billion.
SarahThat is a bullish surprise. Suddenly, 200 million bushels that everyone thought existed just vanished from the spreadsheet. Traders who sold futures expecting a soft market are now completely trapped. They are short a market that just got incredibly tight. They have to scramble to buy those contracts back.
TomAnd that panic buying is what drives the price up.
SarahThat panic buying is what creates those vertical green lines on the price charts.
TomAnd conversely, if they find way more corn than expected.
SarahA bearish surprise. Prices crash because suddenly the scarcity premium evaporates. Everyone realizes there is plenty of corn to go around, so nobody feels the need to buy right now.
TomIt's fascinating that the number itself matters less than the expectation of the number. It's a psychological game, just as much as an agricultural one.
SarahThe market is always pricing the future. The Waste just forces a reality check on those bets. It's the teacher grading the test.
TomSo Waste is the forecast. It's the economists in the locker room predicting the future based on models and surveys. But our next Titan is the one actually checking the receipts. Let's talk about the AMS, the Agricultural Marketing Service.
SarahRight. If WASDA is the weatherman predicting a storm, AMS is the guy standing outside in his yard with a rain gauge, measuring exactly how much actually fell. AMS provides the ground truth.
TomThe sources call this the daily grain market news. How is this data collected? Is it satellite models again?
SarahNo, this is much more analog. It's remarkably human. This is a network of reporters, actual government employees, who are tracking cash bids at elevators, terminals, and processing plants every single day. They aren't asking what do you think corn is worth? They are recording what did you actually pay for corn today?
TomAnd why is this so critical for you, the listener, to understand?
SarahBecause without AMS data, you literally cannot calculate basis. Remember our equation. Basis equals cash minus futures. The futures price is flashing on a screen for everyone in the world to see. It's perfectly transparent, but that local cash price, that is completely opaque.
TomRight. I can't easily see what an elevator in rural Nebraska is paying if I'm sitting in an office in New York.
SarahExactly. AMS aggregates that data. They give you the transparency to see what corn is trading for at the Gulf of Mexico export terminals or along the Illinois River or out in the Pacific Northwest. It allows the market to see the spread across the entire country. And frankly, it prevents the local buyers from hiding the true market value from the farmers.
TomNow the sources mentioned something really interesting and honestly a bit concerning about the reliability of this data recently. They reference a DOGE-related restructuring in early 2026.
SarahRight. The Department of Government Efficiency.
TomYeah. We're looking at a source here that says this restructuring caused significant operational disruptions. And we are just imparting what the sources say here, not taking a stance on the politics of it, but what actually happened on the ground.
SarahIt's a crucial operational note, definitely. As we said, the AMS relies on human beings, it relies on staffing to make those calls. The sources note that the restructuring led to major staffing changes, early retirements, and operational shifts within the agency. And as a direct result, some of those daily price reports have been late or have had significant data gaps.
TomThat sounds like a nightmare for someone whose whole business relies on daily data.
SarahIt is. Imagine you are an algorithm trading on elevator basis, or you're an elevator manager benchmarking your bid against the Gulf price. If the data just isn't there today, you're flying blind, you are guessing.
TomSo what do they do when the government data doesn't show up?
SarahPractitioners have had to scramble for backup plans. They are subscribing to private data services like DTN, or they're just doing it the old-fashioned way, calling around to their competitors to try and get a read on the market.
TomIt really highlights how fragile this information infrastructure can be. We take it for granted that the data will just magically appear on our screens, but it requires people to collect it.
SarahAnd it requires geography. The expert in me really has to point out this data isn't uniform. If you are in central Illinois, which is basically the Saudi Arabia of corn, you are swimming in data. There are reporters and elevators everywhere. But if you are in a fringe area, maybe parts of the Dakotas or the Southeast, the reporting might be spotty. You might only get a price check once a week.
TomSo basis means something very different in a data-rich environment versus a data poor one.
SarahCompletely. In a data-poor environment, the elevator has way more power. They can widen the basis because the farmer doesn't have as much information to verify if it's a fair price or not. Information asymmetry is where the profit margin hides.
TomThat is a huge insight. Okay, so we have the monthly forecast with the WASTA, the daily receipts with the AMS. Now we have the weekly pulse check, the NAS crop progress reports.
SarahThe Monday ritual. Every Monday afternoon, usually around 4 p.m. Eastern, NAS, the National Agricultural Statistics Service drops this report. But this only happens during the growing season, so April through November.
TomAnd this tracks literally watching the grass grow.
SarahEssentially, yes. But they track two very different things. And it's important to distinguish them. First is progress. This is objective. It's a percentage. What percentage of the corn is planted? What percentage is silking? What percentage is harvested?
TomOkay, that seems straightforward enough. Is the crop on schedule or late?
SarahExactly. If planting is late, we worry about frost at the end of the season killing the plant early. If harvest is late, we worry about snow burying the crop. But the second metric is the real market mover. Condition.
TomCongression.
SarahThis is subjective. Surveyors actually go out into the fields and rate the crop on a scale. Very poor, poor, fair, good, excellent.
TomAnd the market focuses on that good to excellent percentage.
SarahThat's the headline number. Traders track it like a hawk. If the good, excellent rating drops from, say, 68% down to 61% in a single woman, that is a red alert. It means the crop is deteriorating incredibly fast, maybe from a flash drought, maybe heat stress.
TomWhich implies lower yields, smaller supply, higher prices. The algorithm runs its course.
SarahCorrect. But and this is a really big but the sources say context is key. A bad rating isn't always a disaster. You have to look at the calendar.
TomExplain that. Why does the date matter if the corn looks bad?
SarahBecause corn has a biological clock. The most critical phase of its life is pollination. This usually happens in July. We actually call it the month of death in the corn market because if it's 100 degrees and dry during pollination, the corn plant won't produce an ear. The yield is destroyed forever. It cannot recover.
TomSo a drop in ratings in July is catastrophic.
SarahTerrifying. It sends the market limit up. But what if that exact same drop happens in September?
TomWell, in September, the corn is already on the cob, right? Right.
SarahThe grain is made, the plant is just drying down. It might look really ugly brown stalks, drooping leaves. So the surveyor might rate it poor because it looks terrible visually. But the bushels are already safely inside the husk. The market will totally yawn at a drop in ratings in September that would have caused an absolute panic in July.
TomSo you can't just trade the spreadsheet number. You have to trade the biology. You have to actually understand the life cycle of the plant.
SarahYou have to know what the plant is doing. The data without the biological context is just noise.
TomAaron Powell We've met the Titans. Waski, AMS, NAS. Now I want to move to section five, the mechanics. How does this data actually move the market? Because the source outlines a chain reaction that I found really helpful to visualize the sequence of events.
SarahAaron Powell It is a chain reaction, but the key to understand is that it moves at different steeds. That friction between speeds creates the opportunity for profit and the risk of huge loss.
TomWalk us through it. The WASTI drops a number, then what?
SarahStep one, the futures market reacts instantly. And I mean instantly. Algorithms and high-frequency traders digest the headline number in milliseconds. The board in Chicago moves immediately. Within 30 minutes, the price of corn on the screen has fully adjusted to the new reality.
TomOkay, so the paper market is fast. It's purely digital.
SarahBut step two, the cash market is sluggish. It's physical. The elevator manager out in Iowa doesn't instantly change his cash bid the literal second the futures move. He might be outside at the scale, he might be at lunch, he might just wait to see where the market settles at the end of the day before he changes his sign.
TomAnd because basis is cash minus futures?
SarahExactly. If futures drop 20 cents in a minute and cash hasn't moved yet, the basis effectively just widened out. The math changed because one variable moved and the other didn't. This creates temporary volatility on report day that can be extremely confusing if you aren't watching both numbers.
TomBut there's an indirect effect too, right? It's not just the math, it's the behavior, the psychology of the people involved.
SarahThis is the real story. The report changes how humans behave. Let's take a bearish report, one that says there is plenty of corn, and the sources actually point to a great historical example of surprises driving behavior, the August 2012 drought.
TomOh, right, 2012 was a massive event.
SarahMassive. The market kept getting bearish yield surprises at first, but then when the drought really set in, the confirmation of low yields drove corn to historic highs. But let's look at the standard bear scenario where there's plenty of corn.
TomOkay, tons of corn. What does the farmer do?
SarahThe farmer gets depressed, they see prices dropping on their phone, and they think I'm not selling at this low price. This is an insult. I worked all year for this crop. I'll throw the corn in the bin, padlock the door, and just wait for a rally.
TomSo farmer selling stops, they go on strike, essentially.
SarahIt dries up completely. Now look at the buyer, the ethanol plant manager or the feedlot operator.
TomWhat are they thinking?
SarahThey are relaxed. The report just told them there's plenty of corn sitting around. They think I don't need to chase bushels, I don't need to bid up to get coverage for next month, I can lower my bid, so the urgency completely disappears.
TomSo you have sellers who refuse to sell and buyers who refuse to bid.
SarahAnd that standoff is what ultimately sets the basis for the next month. It's a negotiation between a stubborn farmer and a relaxed buyer. The basis is the price that finally gets one of them to blink.
TomI really want to make this concrete for everyone listening. The source material gives us a day-in-the-life scenario that really drives this home. Let's step into the shoes of a grain elevator manager in central Illinois. I want you to put me in that chair. Let's do it. Okay, setting the scene. It's mid-October, harvest is happening, it's the busiest time of the year.
SarahCombines are rolling in the fields, dust is flying everywhere, trucks are lining up at your scale, dumping corn. You are drowning in physical grain. You are managing logistics, trying to get trains, monitoring moisture levels. It is chaos.
TomI'm the manager. I've been buying corn from farmers all week at 38 under December.
SarahMeaning 38 cents below the December futures price. That's your basis. Your margin is healthy. You're handling the logistics well, you're feeling good about the season.
TomThen boom. Tuesday at noon, a bearish Wazday report comes out. The USDA finds way more yield. Maybe the reins back in August save the crop. They cut exports because Brazil is selling cheap. The carryout jumps way up.
SarahAnd the market reacts violently. Futures drop 22 cents instantly. The screen turns bright red.
TomSo as the manager, I'm staring at my screen. What is going through my head? Why is this a bad day for me?
SarahYou have three massive headaches instantly. First, inventory value. You bought a bunch of corn yesterday. Today, the futures market says that corn is worth 22 cents less. Now, if you hedged correctly, if you sold those futures contracts we talked about earlier, you didn't lose that money flat out. Your hedge account made money while your cash corn lost money. They offset.
TomOkay, so I'm not bankrupt, but I still have a headache.
SarahHeadache number two, merchandising margin. You make money on the spread. But now the report says there is plenty of corn everywhere. That means the buyers, the people you sell to, like the big exporters down in the Gulf, they are gonna back off. They aren't gonna offer you a strong basis anymore. So the profit you thought you were gonna make when you sold that corn just got severely squeezed. Ouch. And number three, strategy shift. This is the big one. Before the report, you might have been thinking, I'll store this corn, wait for winter, and sell on the basis strengthens.
TomRight, the classic storage play.
SarahBut the report just told you there's too much corn. Basis might not strengthen quickly at all. The urgency is dead. The market is basically telling you we don't need this corn anytime soon.
TomSo what do I do? I have trucks literally lining up outside waiting to dump more corn.
SarahYou protect yourself. You widen your bid immediately.
TomMeaning I pay the farmer even less.
SarahRelative to futures, yes. Instead of 38 under, maybe you move your bid to 42 under or 45 under. You are pushing the risk back onto the farmer because the market just told you the reward for storing that grain is gone.
TomThat is brutal, but it makes perfect business sense. The was day isn't just news, it's a trigger that forces you to change the price tag on millions of dollars of physical inventory instantly.
SarahExactly. And that elevator manager isn't looking at the Fed interest rate. He isn't looking at NVIDIA stock price, he's looking at that carry-out number. That is his reality.
TomNow, for the listeners who really want to get into the weeds on this the advanced class, if you will, we need to talk about seasonality and market structure. Because a bushel of corn in October isn't the same thing as a bushel of corn in July.
SarahCorrect. And this starts with the concept of the marketing year. It doesn't follow the regular calendar. For corn and soybeans, the year runs September 1st to August 31st.
TomWhy September?
SarahBecause that's when the new harvest typically starts in the U.S. And this creates two distinct markets, old crop and new crop.
TomBreak that down for us. What is the actual difference?
SarahOld crop is what is sitting in the bin right now. It is physical inventory available today. It's the corn from the previous harvest. New crop is what is still in the ground or about to be planted. It won't be available until the next harvest.
TomAnd they can treat at totally different prices.
SarahTotally different. You can have a situation where old crop is incredibly expensive, say six dollars, because we are running out of it before the new stuff arrives. Meanwhile, new crop is trading at $4.50 because we expect a record harvest in the fall.
TomSo you cannot compare them directly.
SarahNever. It's like comparing the price of a hotel room tonight in a booked-out city versus a hotel room six months from now. Different markets entirely, different supply and demand dynamics.
TomThe sources also mention that basis follows a seasonal pattern too. There's a rhythm to it, almost like the tides.
SarahThere is. Think of it like a heartbeat. In the fall, during harvest basis is at its absolute weakest. It's the most negative.
TomWhy is that?
SarahBecause the system is completely flooded. Everyone is harvesting at the exact same time. Elevators are full, trains are booked, barges are scarce. No one wants your corn right now because they are drowning in it. So the basis widens out to discourage you from bringing more. The market is saying, please keep it on the farm.
TomSo the market pays you the least when you have the most.
SarahExactly. That is the cardinal rule of harvest. But then comes winter, things stabilize, the harvest pressure eases. Then comes spring.
TomAnd spring is the sweet spot.
SarahUsually, yes. This is when basis strengthens. Supplies are getting tighter, farmers are busy out in the fields planting, so they aren't selling grain. Buyers realize they need to secure coverage before summer, so they start bidding up. Basis gets less negative.
TomSo if you stored your grain from harvest when basis was weak to spring when basis is strong, you capture that game.
SarahThat is the textbook play. You store to capture the basis appreciation. You are getting paid for your patience. You are providing a service to the market by holding inventory until it is actually needed.
TomBut and there's always a but, you have to know if the market is actually paying you to store. Yeah. This brings us to the golden rule of storage: carry versus inverse.
SarahThis is arguably the most important technical concept for a grain operator. It sounds complex, but it's just looking at the relationship between today's price and the future price.
TomLet's define carry first.
SarahA carry market is normal. It means the future price is higher than today's price. Say March corn is 450 and July corn is 470.
TomSo the market is offering me 20 cents more if I just wait until July.
SarahRight. The market is effectively saying, we don't need this corn today. Please hold on to it. We will pay you 20 cents to cover your storage and interest costs.
TomIt's essentially paying your rent for the storage bin.
SarahExactly. It's an incentive to delay. It's a flashing green light to store your grain.
TomNow, flip it. The inverted market.
SarahThis is when today's price is higher than the future price. March is 480, but July is 460.
TomThe market is paying less for the future. That seems totally counterintuitive. Why would something be worth less later?
SarahBecause the market is screaming, we need corn. And now W. It's a massive scarcity signal. It's saying, don't store this. We will penalize you if you wait. Bring it to town today.
TomAnd the rule?
SarahThe golden rule is simple. Never ever store grain in an inverted market. Why? Because you are paying storage, costs actual money out of your pocket to run the fans and pay the bank interest to watch your asset lose value on the screen. It is financial suicide. When the market is inverted, you sell. You empty the bins completely, you give the market what it wants.
TomIt's so interesting because human nature says prices are high, maybe they'll go higher, I should hold.
SarahThe structure tells you what the market needs. Care says wait, Inverse says go. If you ignore the structure, you go broke. It doesn't matter how bullish you feel in your gut, the math will beat you every single time.
TomWe have covered a massive amount of ground here today. We've gone from the James Bond security of the Wastia to the daily grind of the AMS reporters to the seasonal rhythms of the basis.
SarahWe really have. And if I had to summarize the mission of this deep dive, it's about translation.
TomHow so?
SarahThe market is a conversation. On one side, you have the futures market, Chicago, Wall Street, the algos. That represents global anxiety. It's the macro view. It's wondering about rain in Brazil or trade wars with China.
TomThe view from 30,000 feet.
SarahOn the other side, you have the basis, the local elevator, the farmer, the truck driver. That represents local reality, the mud on the boots, the actual physical pile of grain in the yard.
TomAnd in these reports we covered, Waste, AMS, NAS, they are the translators.
SarahExactly. They are the only way those two worlds can talk to each other. The Wasadi tells the local guy what the world is thinking. The AMS tells the global trader what the local guy is actually paying. Without these reports, the conversation breaks down completely. The market becomes inefficient.
TomSo for you listening, whether you're a learner just curious about how the world works or a practitioner trying to run a business, what's the big takeaway?
SarahAaron Powell For the learner, you cannot understand the price of food or the economy of rural America without understanding these reports. They are the heartbeat. For the practitioner, it's not about the number. It never is. It's about the surprise relative to the consensus and what that does to your local basis.
TomThe real story is always in the spread.
SarahAlways.
TomHere is a final provocative thought to leave you with. We talked about how technology is changing everything, right? High frequency trading, AI models predicting yield, satellite imagery. But at the end of the day, the price of corn comes down to a reporter from the AMS walking into an elevator in Nebraska and asking, What did you pay today? It is still fundamentally a human system.
SarahIt is. It relies entirely on trust and human verification.
TomAnd as we saw with the staffing issues in 2026, if you take the humans out, the data goes dark. The most sophisticated AI algorithm in the world is useless if it doesn't have the ground truth.
SarahThat's a great point. You can't digitize the smell of the harvest. You need boots on the ground.
TomNext time you see a headline about soaring corn prices, ask yourself but what is the basis doing? Because that's where the real truth hides. Thanks for listening to this deep dive. We'll catch you on the next one. See you then.