What Determines Arkansas Grain Basis
Arkansas Delta basis on soybeans is among the tightest in the nation, often running 5–15¢ negative. Rice basis varies by class (long-grain vs. medium-grain).
How to Use Basis in Your Grain Marketing Plan
When Arkansas basis strengthens (cash rising relative to futures), local demand is outpacing local supply. This is often the best window for cash sales or HTA contract execution. Basis is compensating you for your geographic location — don't leave it on the table.
When Arkansas basis weakens, local supply is exceeding local demand. Consider on-farm storage or a basis contract (locks in basis without pricing futures) if you expect basis to recover as the marketing year progresses and local demand firms up.
Seasonal Basis Patterns in Arkansas
Basis in Arkansas typically follows a predictable seasonal pattern. Corn and soybean basis is usually weakest at or shortly after harvest (September–November) when local supply peaks. Basis tends to strengthen through winter and spring as local stocks decline and elevator demand builds ahead of the next crop year.
The best cash grain sales for Arkansas producers historically occur in one of two windows: (1) pre-harvest new-crop forwards if basis is historically strong, or (2) January–March when bin-run stocks are tight and elevators compete aggressively for remaining inventory.
Elevator Infrastructure in Arkansas
Key Arkansas elevators: Riceland Foods, Producers Rice Mill, Wayne Farms, CGB Enterprises.
Get Weekly Basis Alerts for Arkansas
GrainBrief monitors USDA AMS elevator bids daily and sends you a basis trend alert when Arkansas basis moves more than 10¢ in a week — the threshold that historically signals a marketing opportunity.
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