Compare local elevator bids for corn, soybeans, and wheat near Elizabethtown, Bladen County.
Bladen County has one of the highest hog densities in the US — Murphy-Brown (Smithfield) hog operations are massive here, creating year-round feed corn and soybean demand independent of export economics. Cape Fear River access provides barge export optionality to the Port of Wilmington. When hog operations are expanding, Elizabethtown area corn bids can lead south-central NC. Watch USDA Hogs and Pigs for demand direction.
Cash bids for Elizabethtown area elevators are reported to USDA AMS through the North Carolina Daily Grain Report. GrainBrief pulls this data every morning at 6:00 AM CT. Sign up free to see the current bid and historical basis chart for Elizabethtown.
Help other farmers near Elizabethtown benchmark their local bid. Submit anonymously — no sign-in required.
Submit Your BidGrain basis is the difference between the local elevator cash bid and the nearby CBOT futures contract. For Elizabethtown, Bladen County, the basis reflects transportation costs to export terminals, local supply and demand balance, and elevator margin.
A strengthening basis (moving toward zero or positive) means local demand is increasing relative to futures — elevators are bidding more aggressively for your grain. A weakening basis means local supply is ample or export demand has softened.
Factors that affect Elizabethtown area basis include: proximity to river export terminals, local processor demand (ethanol, crush, livestock feeding), seasonal harvest pressure, and freight costs from this location to terminal markets.
| Basis Signal | What It Means | Marketing Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Basis narrows (strengthens) | Local demand exceeding local supply; elevator bidding up | Good time to sell — local pricing is strong relative to futures |
| Basis widens (weakens) | Local supply ample; elevator has less urgency to buy | Consider storing if carry is positive on futures — wait for demand signal |
| Basis vs. 5-yr average | Compare current basis to historical seasonal pattern | If current basis is stronger than average, seasonal advantage may not persist |
GrainBrief pulls daily grain cash bid data from USDA Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) via their MARS API. The North Carolina Daily Grain Report covers elevator bids reported throughout the state each morning. This is the same underlying data used by DTN, Barchart, and other commercial grain data providers.
GrainBrief ingests USDA AMS data daily at 6:00 AM CT. USDA typically publishes North Carolina grain bids between 9:00 AM and noon local time. Create a free account to get email alerts when new bids are posted.
Yes — use the What's Your Bid? form to anonymously submit your local elevator's cash bid. Your submission helps other farmers in Bladen County and surrounding areas benchmark whether they're getting a competitive price. No sign-in required and your IP address is never stored.
GrainBrief public pages show source context and plain-English interpretation. Subscriber views expose live ingest status, source cadence, and latest successful refresh by feed.