While U.S. production data dominated market attention in USDA’s January reports, the broader takeaway for agribusiness players lies in the global balance sheet. Updated figures from the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) and international production assessments reinforce a central theme for 2026: global grain and oilseed supplies are expanding, and competition among exporters is intensifying.
USDA now projects record soybean production in Brazil, estimated at 178 million metric tons for the 2025/26 marketing year. The increase is driven by continued area expansion to a new record and yields supported by improving and more consistent weather patterns across major producing regions.
After a delayed start to the rainy season, precipitation normalized by December, particularly in the Center-West and southern regions. Additionally, NOAA forecasts point to a high probability of a transition from La Niña to ENSO-neutral conditions early in 2026. For agribusinesses, this is a critical signal: ENSO-neutral conditions typically favor more regular rainfall in southern Brazil, including Rio Grande do Sul, reducing downside yield risk and reinforcing Brazil’s export capacity later in the year.
Satellite-based vegetation indices (NDVI) further support above-average yield expectations in Mato Grosso, Paraná, Goiás, and Mato Grosso do Sul. The result is a Brazilian crop that strengthens South America’s role as the dominant supplier during the first half of the calendar year, raising competitive pressure on U.S. soybean exports, particularly into China.
In wheat, USDA data highlight sharp contrasts but a net-positive global supply picture.
For global wheat markets, these gains reinforce the perception of ample export availability, keeping price upside limited unless weather disruptions emerge in Northern Hemisphere crops later in 2026.
USDA estimates show China’s corn production reached a new record of 301.2 million metric tons, supported by record yields and policy-driven incentives aimed at stabilizing planted areas and boosting domestic supply. Favorable weather across key northeastern provinces played a central role.
In South America, Brazil and Argentina remain large contributors to global corn supplies, even as some regional yield variability persists. The combined effect is a global corn balance sheet that remains well supplied, particularly for feed and industrial demand.
Against this global backdrop, USDA’s Crop Production 2025 Summary brought notable revisions to U.S. figures:
Quarterly Grain Stocks data further confirmed that both corn and soybeans are entering the winter period with comfortable inventories, limiting near-term price volatility unless demand accelerates.
For agribusiness decision-makers, today’s USDA reports underline several strategic considerations:
In a market defined by supply abundance rather than scarcity, execution, risk management, and timing are likely to differentiate winners and losers across the agribusiness value chain in 2026.