This data is reported by USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS). USDA's Export Sales Reporting Program monitors U.S. agricultural export sales on a daily and weekly basis. Export sales reporting provides a constant stream of up-to-date market information for 40 U.S. agricultural commodities sold abroad. A single statistic reveals the significance of the program: in a typical year, the program monitors more than 40 percent of total U.S. agricultural exports. The program also serves as an early alert on the possible impact foreign sales have on U.S. supplies and prices. The weekly U.S. Export Sales report is the most current available source of U.S. export sales data. The data is used to analyze the overall level of export demand, determine where markets exist, and assess the relative position of U.S. commodities in foreign markets.
The date field in export sales is weekly, based on the calendar year. However, the dataset also keeps track of marketing year export sales. Be cautious when aggregating the export sales data over the date variable to properly account for these factors.
The turn of the marketing year often falls on a different day of the week then the weekly calendar year reporting. In this case, FAS adds an additional row (two total) to the dataset for that calendar week. One row represents that week's values which fell in the previous marketing year, while the other row captures that week's values which fell in the new marketing year. The "Marketing Year Start or End" variable labels these rows as "ENDING MY" and "STARTING MY", respectively, and is otherwise empty.
This creates a double counting issue when aggregating some of the variables by calendar week. See our view, https://agtransport.usda.gov/d/885i-uek7, for an example of avoiding double counting to show total outstanding sales over time.
Information on US export sales, by commodity and country of destination, updated weekly.
This is a query from the export sales data, aggregating total outstanding sales by week, commodity, and country. The query is necessary to avoid double counting in the weeks where the calendar week ending and marketing year ending do not align.
This dataset shows weekly outstanding (unshipped) export sales of grain from 2000 to the present, which are contracted to be shipped from the U.S., and includes countries of destination.
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Corn futures held steady as USDA reported an export sale and updated crop conditions. Key insights on market trends, export data, and crop health.
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Cotton futures extended losses as demand fluctuated, with key contracts dropping and global market data showing mixed signals. The USDA reported sales of 241,982 RB.
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The wheat market shows mixed trading patterns with varied futures performance, influenced by USDA's Export Sales report and recent yield estimates.
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State fact sheets provide information on population, income, education, employment, federal funds, organic agriculture, farm characteristics, farm financial indicators, top commodities, and exports, for each State in the United States. Links to county-level data are included when available.This record was taken from the USDA Enterprise Data Inventory that feeds into the https://data.gov catalog. Data for this record includes the following resources: Query tool For complete information, please visit https://data.gov.
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Wheat futures rebounded early Friday, supported by USDA export sales data and strong global demand, with key wheat contracts showing gains.
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Corn futures declined as the market awaits USDA's Crop Production report, with expectations of higher yields. Global supply shifts and export data influence price trends.
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Corn futures experienced a notable rise due to strong export sales, with significant transactions reported to South Korea and other destinations.
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Wheat fell to 504.75 USd/Bu on August 22, 2025, down 0.44% from the previous day. Over the past month, Wheat's price has fallen 6.61%, but it is still 0.50% higher than a year ago, according to trading on a contract for difference (CFD) that tracks the benchmark market for this commodity. Wheat - values, historical data, forecasts and news - updated on August of 2025.
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Corn prices saw a slight recovery after recent declines, driven by USDA data updates, export sales to Mexico, and global supply adjustments. The article covers key market movements and projections.
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Discover the mixed trends in the soybean market with insights into trading sessions, export sales, and market fluctuations.
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Cotton futures face further declines as weak export sales data impacts prices, with market trends pointing to continued volatility.
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The wheat market displays mixed trading patterns despite strong export sales, with variations across futures markets and insights into regional production.
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Discover the mixed performance of soybean futures with minor gains and losses amid market fluctuations, export sales insights, and USDA reports.
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Corn futures closed mixed as USDA reported export sales to South Korea and Spain. Brazil's corn production estimate was revised higher, while Argentina anticipates expanded planting. Current market data included.
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Corn futures fell by 3 to 4 cents amidst market pressures, influenced by wheat markets and lower export sales. Discover the latest trends in corn pricing.
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Cotton futures showed slight declines influenced by a stronger US dollar and steady crude oil prices, with key data on export sales and market indicators reviewed.
This data is reported by USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS). USDA's Export Sales Reporting Program monitors U.S. agricultural export sales on a daily and weekly basis. Export sales reporting provides a constant stream of up-to-date market information for 40 U.S. agricultural commodities sold abroad. A single statistic reveals the significance of the program: in a typical year, the program monitors more than 40 percent of total U.S. agricultural exports. The program also serves as an early alert on the possible impact foreign sales have on U.S. supplies and prices. The weekly U.S. Export Sales report is the most current available source of U.S. export sales data. The data is used to analyze the overall level of export demand, determine where markets exist, and assess the relative position of U.S. commodities in foreign markets.
The date field in export sales is weekly, based on the calendar year. However, the dataset also keeps track of marketing year export sales. Be cautious when aggregating the export sales data over the date variable to properly account for these factors.
The turn of the marketing year often falls on a different day of the week then the weekly calendar year reporting. In this case, FAS adds an additional row (two total) to the dataset for that calendar week. One row represents that week's values which fell in the previous marketing year, while the other row captures that week's values which fell in the new marketing year. The "Marketing Year Start or End" variable labels these rows as "ENDING MY" and "STARTING MY", respectively, and is otherwise empty.
This creates a double counting issue when aggregating some of the variables by calendar week. See our view, https://agtransport.usda.gov/d/885i-uek7, for an example of avoiding double counting to show total outstanding sales over time.