High Plains Journal
High Plains Journal reports mixed but generally firm hay conditions across states. Colorado said trade activity was very light (May 21) with demand “good to very good.” Missouri noted first-cut progress ahead of average and nationwide stock declines (May 21) with steady prices. Nebraska (May 22) saw higher alfalfa and delivered hay prices and very good demand amid dryness. Montana (May 29) reported very light supplies, sharply higher fall hay, and drought worsening (76% moderate-or-worse). Oklah

Background
This is a regional forage/hay market update summarizing recent state-by-state conditions, demand, and drought metrics.
Why it matters
The main tradable signal is macro/commodity tightness: drought and light supplies are pushing higher prices for certain hay types and fall delivery, but there is no direct linkage to a specific US-listed company.
Market relevance
For traders, this functions as a commodity/feed-cost risk gauge rather than company-specific news.
Market effects
Broad read-through to US livestock feed costs and ag input demand; no single public issuer is directly named.
Drought and winter-kill impacts are concentrated in the Plains (MT/NE/OK/MO), likely tightening hay availability regionally.
Limited direct global linkage; primarily affects domestic feed/forage supply and pricing.
Alternative perspectives
Despite drought risk, the article also notes some areas have good demand and steady prices—so near-term price spikes may be less abrupt than feared.
Hay pricing depends on contract terms, freight, and moisture timing; the piece provides qualitative ranges but no company-specific supply/disruption data.
Key entities
- marketUS hay market (regional reports)
State-by-state updates on hay availability, demand, pricing changes, and drought conditions.
- data_sourceUS Drought Monitor (state-level)
Provides drought severity percentages used to frame expected hay production constraints.



