TOP HEADLINES
Deere Makes First Investment in Farm Drones With Imaging Deal
World agriculture-equipment leader Deere & Co. is making its first investment in drones with the acquisition of Sentera, a remote imagery provider that can connect to the machines increasingly used on the farm.
Drones equipped with Sentera’s technology can quickly capture high-resolution images that allow farmers to survey crops and create maps where weeds are located, Deere said in a statement Friday. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.
The move into drones comes as technological advances as well as tight labor in rural areas has prompted growers to turn to automation and autonomy to help with planting, treating and harvesting crops.
Deere has been introducing machines that can spray and till fields without a driver, with some farmers struggling to find enough tractor operators.
The company’s shares climbed to a record last week on expectations the farm-machinery sector might start rebounding from several years of lower sales.
FUTURES & WEATHER
Wheat prices overnight are down 9 1/2 in SRW, down 11 in HRW, down 4 1/2 in HRS; Corn is down 2 1/4; Soybeans up 3 1/2; Soymeal down $2.10; Soyoil up 0.52.
Markets finished last week with wheat prices up 4 in SRW, up 5 in HRW, up 16 1/2 in HRS; Corn is up 9 3/4; Soybeans up 12 3/4; Soymeal up $3.00; Soyoil up 0.42.
For the month to date wheat prices are up 2 1/4 in SRW, down 1 3/4 in HRW, up 5 in HRS; Corn is down 18 1/4; Soybeans up 19 1/4; Soymeal down $3.90; Soyoil up 0.90.
Year-To-Date nearby futures are down 3.4% in SRW, down 5.6% in HRW, up 1.0% in HRS; Corn is down 0.3%; Soybeans up 6.5%; Soymeal down 4.4%; Soyoil up 25.3%.
Chinese Ag futures (JUL 25) Soybeans down 26 yuan; Soymeal up 11; Soyoil down 4; Palm oil up 20; Corn down 4 — Malaysian Palm is up 35.
Malaysian palm oil prices overnight were up 35 ringgit (+0.91%) at 3868.
There were no changes in registrations. Registration total: 193 SRW Wheat contracts; 0 Oats; 78 Corn; 242 Soybeans; 863 Soyoil; 823 Soymeal; 598 HRW Wheat.
Preliminary changes in futures Open Interest as of May 23 were: SRW Wheat up 9,602 contracts, HRW Wheat down 582, Corn up 8,064, Soybeans down 287, Soymeal up 1,895, Soyoil up 2,248.
Northern Plains: Recent precipitation has been beneficial for increasing soil moisture and reducing drought throughout most of the region. Some showers will remain possible through Wednesday, but much of the week should be drier and beneficial for additional fieldwork. Some isolated showers may develop over the weekend as well. A bigger system should move through the region Monday night and Tuesday, bringing widespread showers through the rest of the week. Temperatures will be on the rise this week, but fall behind next week’s system.
Central/Southern Plains: Another system this weekend brought widespread showers and thunderstorms. That produced good rainfall for some dry areas, but also brought heavy rain to some areas that didn’t necessarily need it across eastern Oklahoma and Texas and rounds of severe weather as well. This system continues to produce showers through Thursday before the region goes on a drier trend. Systems will favor the Northern Plains next week, leaving the region with spotty showers and higher temperatures. Some stretch of drier weather can be dealt with because of the recent rain. But this may be the start of a drier trend that is forecast to increase throughout the month of June.
Midwest: Scattered showers fell over southwestern areas of the region over the long holiday weekend. They weren’t necessarily needed. But the system responsible will pinwheel through the region this week with areas of isolated to scattered showers through Friday and some more may drop over western areas this weekend with another disturbance. Soil moisture is certainly higher in most areas, which is good news for many that have already planted. But there are some areas, particularly across the south, that haven’t had very good conditions for planting yet and it is starting to get very late. Showers this week will be more of a nuisance and are not expected to be heavy for too many areas. Cooler temperatures remain in place for most of the week, but should be rising starting on Friday and continuing into the weekend and early June.
Delta/Lower Mississippi: Yet another system brought rounds of showers and thunderstorms over the long holiday weekend and continues in the region through Thursday with more showers and potential for severe weather. There have only been limited dry days across the region all spring, which has built in a lot of soil moisture, but also caused ponding and flooding for extended periods as well. Temperatures are mostly below normal this week, which may also lead to disease pressure in areas that cannot dry out.
Canadian Prairies: It was mostly dry over the weekend, though some isolated showers moved into Alberta on Monday and possibly fall in Saskatchewan on Tuesday. Drier weather this week should allow for most producers to finish planting either on schedule or ahead of it after some really good rain previously. A disturbance may bring showers Thursday night and Friday and the pattern is setting up to favor at least southern portions of the region with additional moderate or even heavy rain next week. That would be highly favorable after the good planting pace.
Brazil: A front produced heavy rain over some southern areas over the long holiday weekend. But it will get a significant push northward for Tuesday, bringing some heavy rain to winter wheat areas, but also far southern safrinha corn areas that may still be filling and could use the rain. Showers will be waning as the front moves north on Wednesday. Safrinha corn harvest has started, though at a slow pace. That pace will pick up in about two weeks. Colder air will move in later this week and weekend and could produce some patchy frosts as far north as Parana. If that occurs, that could affect safrinha corn in some areas.
Argentina: A front brought scattered showers over the long weekend, but those showers were isolated over wet areas in the central. Northern areas get another push of heavy rainfall on Tuesday, but will not really affect winter wheat in a significant way. Planting should be increasing going through June. Cold air will move in this week and could produce frosts in some areas. Early frosts are not a concern for the remaining corn and soybean harvest, or early winter wheat establishment.
Europe: Scattered showers moved through drier areas across the north over the long holiday weekend, but amounts were not particularly heavy for very many areas which needed it. More impulses will bring additional showers to northern areas this week, and the driest areas in France, the UK, and Germany may be the target for additional heavy rainfall next week. That would be preferred as many of these areas have fallen behind significantly in precipitation deficits over the last few months.
Black Sea: Heavy rain continued to fall over western areas of the region over the long holiday weekend. The system responsible will be slow to move this week. It may spread showers farther east into Ukraine, but will be very spotty going through western Russia later this week and weekend. Though showers have been more frequent, long-term rainfall deficits continue to be very large for much of the region, making for a lot of concern if and when conditions turn hotter and drier.
Australia: Though some showers moved through over the last several days, dryness and drought continue to develop over some important areas of the country’s wheat belt. A couple of systems may try to bring showers to the country for the end of the month and early June, but rainfall is largely below normal for this time of year, unfavorable for winter wheat and canola establishment.
China: Central and northeast China were drier over the weekend, unfavorable for crop development. Very little rainfall is forecast over the next two weeks, which will favor northeastern areas a bit more, which are in much better shape in terms of early soil moisture. Filling wheat on the North China Plain have had harsher conditions to end their season and could see additional stress before harvest begins in mid-June.
The player sheet for 5/23 had funds: net sellers of 2,000 contracts of SRW wheat, sellers of 9,000 corn, sellers of 4,000 soybeans, sellers of 2,000 soymeal, and buyers of 500 soyoil.
TENDERS
- CORN TENDER: Taiwan’s MFIG purchasing group issued an international tender to buy up to 65,000 metric tons of animal feed corn, which can be sourced from the United States, Argentina, Brazil or South Africa.
PENDING TENDERS
- CORN TENDER: Algerian state agency ONAB issued an international tender to purchase up to 80,000 metric tons of animal feed corn sourced from optional origins
- RICE TENDER: The state purchasing agency in Mauritius issued an international tender to buy 8,000 tons of long grain white rice sourced from optional origins.
- BARLEY TENDER: Jordan’s state grains buyer issued an international tender to purchase up to 120,000 metric tons of animal feed barley.
TODAY
US Cattle on Feed Placements Fell to 1.61M Head in April
Placements onto feedlots of capacity of 1,000 or more fell 2.6% from a year ago, according to the USDA’s monthly report.
- That’s the lowest April placements amount since 2020
- Analysts were expecting a drop of 2.5%
- The US feedlot herd as of May 1 were down 1.5% y/y to 11.376m head
- Cattle marketed from feedlots declined 2.5% to 1.825m head
Argentina wheat harvest could tick up on favorable weather, soil conditions
The 2025/26 wheat harvest could be the second-best on record, the Rosario grains exchange said in a report on Friday, given favorable weather forecasts and excellent soil conditions for planting.
That will allow farmers to widen their planting area to 7.2 million hectares (17.8 million acres), the exchange said, which could yield a larger harvest of 21.2 million metric tons. The exchange currently forecasts a harvest of 21 million tons.
“Let’s hope that reality confirms this optimistic forecast,” the exchange said.
Wheat planting kicked off this week with major delays caused in some areas by heavy rains in recent days.
Also, the government this week extended a tax cut on exports of wheat through next March.
“This measure not only improves profitability for producers, but also provides more room for investment in technology and raw materials,” the exchange said.
SOYBEAN/CEPEA: Prices increase a little in Brazil
The soy market in Brazil seems to look for a direction due to recent news about crops in South America, the sowing pace in the United States and to the war trade between the US and China. Therefore, soy prices have been oscillating slightly, but, in general, values have increased after drops verified over the last weeks.
Purchasers are still trying to buy new batches at lower quotations, while producers are away from closing trades in the spot market, expecting new price rises. The number of anticipated contracts for the 2025/26 season increased, which indicates that farmers are optimistic.
The CEPEA/ESALQ Index (Paranaguá) moved up 1.5% from May 15-22, closing at BRL 133.76 per 60-kg bag on May 22. The CEPEA/ESALQ Index (Paraná) rose 0.5% in the same comparison, at BRL 128.15 per 60-kg bag. On the average of the regions by Cepea, soybean prices increased 0.6% both in the over-the-counter market (paid to farmers) and in the wholesale market (deals between processors). The US dollar dropped 0.6% against Real between May 15 and 22, closing at BRL 5.650 on May 22.
BYPRODUCTS – The demand increase for soy oil (in order to produce biodiesel and for human consumption) has required an increase of processing the grain, which boosts the soybean meal supply as a consequence, pressing its quotations down.
On the average of the regions surveyed by Cepea, soymeal prices downed 0.5% in the last seven days. The Brazilian value of soy oil increased 0.6%, at 6.411.61 BRL per ton (in São Paulo city with 12% ICMS) on May 22.
CROPS – The 2024/25 harvesting is close to the end in Brazil. According to Conab, 98.9% of the total had been harvested up to May 17.
CORN/CEPEA: Second crop harvesting starts; prices move down
The harvesting of the second corn crop has started in Paraná and in some areas in Mato Grosso. As for the summer crop, activities have been progressing and are close to the end.
As a result, the volume of product available to trade is higher in the spot market, a context that has been pressing down values. As for the demand, many players are away from closing deals, expecting new prices drops, because of estimates indicating a large crop.
Abroad, corn quotations are moving up, influenced by the excess of rainfall in Argentina, storms in producing regions in the US and frost forecasts in Central-Southern Brazil in the next week. The international price rise was not enough to limit decreases in the Brazilian market.
Besides the weather, players in Brazil are also with eyes on the bird flu, which can affect the demand for corn in the mid-term.
PRICES – The ESALQ/BM&FBovespa Index (Campinas, SP) decreased 2.5% between May 15 and 22, closing at BRL 71.22 per 60-kilo bag on May 22 – price drops have been registered for 25 days in a row. On the average of the regions surveyed by Cepea, from May 15-22, corn values dropped 3.6% in the over-the-counter market (paid to farmers) and 3% in the wholesale market (deals between processors).
EXPORTS – In May (11 producing days), Brazil shipped only 32.98 thousand tons of corn, below the 413.37 thousand tons sold in May/24, according to data from Secex. Prices at the port of Paranaguá (PR) downed 6.2% from May 15-22, while the US dollar dropped 0.6%, closing at BRL 5.65 yesterday.
CROPS – The second crop harvesting has started in Paraná, reaching 1% of the area up to May 19, according to Seab/Deral. Activities have also started in Mato Grosso, totaling 0.1% until May 17 – data from Conab.
The summer crop harvesting, in turn, is at 82.3% of the area, more than the average over the last five years (2020-2024), of 79.2% – data from Conab. In Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina and Paraná, activities are practically finished: respectively, they reached 95% (data from Emater up to May 22), 99.6% (Conab until May 17) and 99% (Seab/Deral up to May 19).
Brazil to Ramp Up Soy Production in 2024-25 Harvest: Datagro
Brazil’s soy production is expected to grow 0.4% more in the 2024-25 harvest than previous estimates due to an increase in the planted area, according to Datagro Graos’ latest projection.
- Sees soy production at 172.0 million tons, 11% higher than the 2023-24 harvest
- “Despite the late start of sowing, given the delay in spring-summer rains in the Central-West, the 2024/25 harvest could be completed within the normal window, benefiting from broadly favorable weather conditions during crop development,” Datagro said in a note
- Forecast for Brazil corn production increased 0.7%, with a projected harvest of 132.7 million tons in 2024/25
- Prior month, estimate was for 131.7 million tons of corn production
Brazil’s C-S Winter Corn Harvest 0.9% Done as of May 22: AgRural
Harvest of Brazil’s winter corn crop is starting in the states of Mato Grosso and Paraná, AgRural says in an emailed report.
- Harvest was 2% completed at the same time last year
Russia May Increase Grain Harvest This Year Y/Y: Interfax
Grain harvest in 2025 should be higher than a year ago, given good expected weather, Agriculture Minister Oksana Lut says, according to Interfax.
- However, drought is a threat to some regions, including Rostov and Krasnodar regions
- Agriculture exports decreased this year compared to previous one, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Patrushev says, according to Interfax
- Decline is due to economic factors as well as serious shortcomings on the part of the Agriculture Ministry, he says
Russian Agriculture Ministry expects higher grain harvest this year -deputy minister
The Agriculture Ministry expects an increase in the grain harvest this year, but the journey from field to elevator is long and challenging, Deputy Agriculture Minister Andrei Razin said.
“We are trying not to render any forecasts at this time. We expect to receive more than last year, as the [agriculture] minister [Oksana Lut] has said,” Razin told reporters on the sidelines of the Caucasus Investment Forum. “However, you see that we have had many limiting factors throughout the season, namely droughts, and waterlogging [of the soil], and difficult harvests. Therefore, we may have a very high biological potential for the crops, though there is still a long and difficult way to go before harvesting and delivery to elevators. So, we are not giving any forecasts, we are working to meet obligations for both the domestic and foreign markets,” he said.
“The minister [Lut] said that we are planning a better result than last year, and this theme was voiced in the president’s report,” Razin said.
Answering a question about the sowing campaign, Razin said that it is currently ahead of schedule, “but we’re working according to the weather,” he said.
According to Rosstat, Russia excluding the new regions harvested 125.9 million tonnes of grain in 2024, including 82.6 million tonnes of wheat. According to the Agriculture Ministry, including the new regions the total harvest amounted to around 130 million tonnes.
All areas of sugar beet damaged by the May frosts have been re-sown, he said. “We have no reason to expect any serious decline in the harvest figures,” he said. Farmers are provided “with equipment, seeds and expertise,” he said.
Speaking about the situation in potato fields, Razin said that it is planned that the area under potatoes will be slightly increased this year.
“We are working as usual within the range of long-term average figures. Of course, recurring frosts have played their role this year, but overall the situation is still normal. [We will assess] all losses and all results after the end of the harvest,” he said.
Ukraine’s Grain Exports Down 17% Y/y in Season So far
Ukraine’s grain exports in the season that started in July 1 reached 37.6m tons as of Friday, down about 17% versus the same period last season, according to data on the Agriculture Ministry’s website.
- The total includes:
- 14.6m tons of wheat, 14% lower y/y
- 2.29m tons of barley, down 3% y/y
- 20m tons of corn, down 21.4% y/y
- Exports so far in May reached 2.3m tons, almost 43% below the same period last year
India’s soybean acreage to shrink as farmers favour corn, sugar cane
Soybean acreage in India is likely to fall this year as corn and sugar cane could replace it in some areas after these crops gave higher returns to farmers than the oilseed, farmers and industry officials told Reuters.
Soybean is India’s main summer-sown oilseed crop and lower output will force the world’s biggest importer of edible oils to increase overseas buying of palm oil, soyoil and sunflower oil.
“We’ve barely made any profit from soybean over the past three years, so this year we’re switching to corn — it’s giving better returns,” said Subodh Parmar, a farmer in Devas in Madhya Pradesh state.
Soybean prices were under pressure in the last few months, which is prompting farmers to switch to other crops, said D.N. Pathak, executive director of the Soybean Processors Association of India (SOPA).
The government fixed a floor price of 4,892 rupees ($57.29) per 100 kg for soybean, but since the start of the new marketing year in October 2024, prices have been 10 to 20% below this level.
Soybean is mainly a rain-fed crop, and the monsoon rains – expected to be above average this year – play a crucial part in deciding yields.
The states of Madhya Pradesh in central India, Maharashtra in the west, Rajasthan in the northwest and Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka in the south, are major producers of soybean.
Soybean contains more than 80% meal and less than 20% oil, but local soymeal demand has been squeezed by cheaper supplies of distiller’s dried grains with solubles (DDGS), a byproduct of ethanol production, said B.V. Mehta, executive director of the Solvent Extractors’ Association of India (SEA).
The poultry industry is a big consumer of soymeal, but in the past two years it has been replacing soymeal with DDGS since it is more than 30% cheaper, Mehta said.
In Maharashtra, the leading producer of sugar in India, ample rainfall has prompted some farmers to switch to water-intensive perennial sugarcane, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trade house.
“It seems the new soybean crop will be considerably lower than last year’s. This will obviously force India to increase imports of edible oils,” the dealer said.
India buys palm oil mainly from Indonesia and Malaysia, while it imports soyoil and sunflower oil from Argentina, Brazil, Russia and Ukraine.
China boosts imports of oilseed cakes, meal from Russia 2.8-fold in Jan-April – Agroexport center
China boosted imports of oilseed cakes and meal from Russia 2.8-fold year-on-year to 315,000 tonnes in January-April 2025 from around 111,000 tonnes in January-April 2024, the Agriculture Ministry’s Agroexport center said, citing data from China’s General Administration of Customs (GAC).
Imports jumped 2.2-fold to $96 million in monetary terms in the reporting period from nearly $43 million the previous year.
China particularly purchased 153,800 tonnes of sunflower cakes and meal, 157,200 tonnes of rapeseed meal, and 4,000 tonnes of soybean meal.
Russia places third among the principal suppliers of these products to China in terms of volume, with Ukraine placing second at 448,000 tonnes and Canada placing first at 730,000 tonnes.
Pertamina to Start Commercial Trial for Bio-Jet Fuel Production
Indonesia’s state-owned refinery Kilang Pertamina Internasional (KPI) plans to start a trial for the commercial production of certified sustainable aviation fuel from used cooking oil in the third quarter of this year, according to company’s statement.
- KPI to expand implementation of the project to its refineries in Dumai, Riau province and Balongan, West Java province
- The company produced bio-jet fuel with 2.4% content of palm kernel oil in 2020 at its Cilacap refinery
- KPI expects to begin operating the Cilacap green refinery unit that processes used cooking oil and palm oil mill effluent as feedstock among others in 2028
- Pertamina Patra Niaga has prepared facility to collect used cooking oil at 10 fuel stations in Jakarta
US Pork Production Falls 1.8% This Week, Beef Rises: USDA
US federally inspected pork production falls to 511m pounds for the week ending May 24 from 520m in the previous week, according to USDA estimates published on the agency’s website.
- Hog slaughter down 1.6% from a week ago to 2.362m head
- Beef production up 0.5% from a week ago, cattle slaughter rises 0.7%
- For the year, beef production is 2.6% below last year’s level at this time, and pork is 1.7% below
US Poultry Slaughter Fell 1.2% Y/y in April: USDA
Slaughter fell to 5.76 billion pounds, according to the USDA’s monthly poultry slaughter report released on the agency’s website.
- Chicken live weight rose 0.7% in April from year ago
- Chickens condemned post-mortem up 1.8% y/y
- Condemned ante-mortem up 7.1% y/y
US Egg Production Fell 6.7% in April From Year Ago: USDA
The US produced 8.32b eggs in April vs 8.92b in the same period a year ago, according to a report from the USDA.
- Output of table eggs fell 7.5% y/y to 7.09b
- Hatching eggs down 2.1% to 1.24b
- Chicken and egg production in millions:
Brazil’s Bird Flu Event Now Restricted to Case Zone: WOAH
The geographical indicator of the confirmed bird flu case in a commercial flock in Rio Grande do Sul state was modified from “event occurs in country” to “event occurs in zone,” World Organization of Animal Health said in a report.
- Change on geographic indicator came after transmission of additional information by the country, WOAH said
- WOAH considers zone as the area of 10 kilometers around the infected farm
- “Epidemiological investigation conducted by the Official Veterinary Service (OVS) in the perifocal area (3 kilometers around the outbreak) and in the surveillance area (7 kilometers from the perifocal area, adding to 10 kilometers) has not identified other cases”, WOAH said about the confirmed case in the municipality of Montenegro, in southern Rio Grande do Sul state
- Brazil’s government confirmed negative result for suspected bird flu case in commercial farm in Santa Catarina state
- A suspected case in commercial farm in northern state Tocantins still under investigation, according to agriculture ministry
India Launches New Model to Improve Weather Forecasting System
India unveiled a new model on Monday to improve its weather prediction capability and better manage natural disasters.
- The new system, called Bharat Forecast System, will enable the world’s most-populous nation to predict weather events for blocks of six kilometers, compared with 12 kilometers now, Earth Sciences Minister Jitendra Singh said at a briefing in New Delhi
- Localized extreme weather events led to demand for finer resolution models, he said
Monsoon’s Earliest Onset in India Since 2009 Boosts Crop Outlook
The monsoon, a weather phenomenon that waters more than half of India’s farmland, reached the subcontinent before the usual time, boosting crop outlook and raising hopes the nation will lift remaining curbs on exports of farm goods.
The southwest monsoon, which usually begins its journey in Kerala on June 1, arrived eight days earlier in the southern state — the earliest onset since 2009, according to the India Meteorological Department. The weather bureau has predicted above-average rains this year.
Precipitation during the June-September season is crucial for spurring India’s economy and keeping food prices under check. Plentiful and timely rains not only help increase production of crops such as rice, soybeans and cotton, but also help fill reservoirs — the main source of irrigation for winter crops like wheat and pulses.
Pre-monsoon showers have been above normal and the early onset will shift farm activities at least a week before the usual time, said Ashwini Bansod, vice president, commodities research at PhillipCapital India. Sowing may start early next month instead of mid June, which means an early harvest, she said.
Conditions are favorable for further advance of the monsoon to Maharashtra and some other parts of India, including southern and northeastern states, during the next two to three days, the meteorological department said.
Erratic weather in recent years has hit farm output and prompted New Delhi to curb shipments of several commodities. A good monsoon could boost agricultural production and prompt the government to lift the restrictions. India has already removed its ban on several varieties of rice.
Higher supplies of grains, pulses, oilseeds, sugar and other commodities may help maintain low food prices, which have gradually fallen from over 10% in October to below 2% in April.
India’s hundreds of millions of farmers, together the world’s second-biggest producers of rice, wheat and sugar, rely heavily on the rainy season to irrigate their fields. Sowing of monsoon crops begins in late May, while harvesting starts in September.
Rainfall to ease drought in China’s key wheat areas, national meteorological center says
Rainfall in China through next Tuesday is expected to ease drought conditions in key wheat-growing provinces like Henan and Shaanxi, according to the National Meteorological Center.
Most of China’s major wheat regions will experience clear, harvest-friendly weather this week, the Xinhua news agency reported.
The agriculture ministry has urged local authorities to speed up harvesting and ensure timely grain drying and machinery support to secure the summer crop ahead of expected rains, Xinhua added.
The ministry pledged in a meeting on Monday to effectively manage disaster prevention and mitigation during the flood season, and guard against abrupt shifts between drought and flooding, according to a ministry statement.
It also called for early warnings, preparations and responses against disasters to minimise losses, vowing to push forward with summer planting and increase yields, the statement showed.
Chinese authorities earlier this month issued multiple weather alerts as high temperatures threatened crops in Henan, whose wheat production accounted for about 27% of China’s total wheat output in 2024. A decline in production could prompt China to increase wheat imports to address potential shortfalls.
Reuters previously reported that Chinese buyers recently purchased 400,000 to 500,000 metric tons of wheat from Australia and Canada, as concerns grow over the impact of heat on crops in China’s agricultural heartland.
DRY PAMPAS, SCATTERED RAINS IN CENTRAL AND SOUTH BRAZIL
What to Watch:
- Dry weather in the Pampas, favorable to corn harvesting
- Isolated wet spells in South, Center West and Southeast Brazil
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