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Filled to maximum capacity, it's approximately 36 bushels of wheat.
A commodity is something you buy in bulk and strictly on what it is. For instance, wheat. There are several varieties of wheat, but when you are buying an order of hard red wheat (5000 bushels) you don't care whether it's Quaker wheat, Acme wheat or whatever--you call the grain elevator, tell them to bring you 5000 bushels of hard red wheat, and be there when the trucks arrive.
A commodity brokerage is a company that sets up deals between buyers and sellers of commodities, more specifically commodities futures and commodities options. Easy example: You are the grain buyer for Wonder Bread. You need 100,000 bushels of wheat every month for the next year. You could spend your entire life going from grain elevator to grain elevator trying to scrounge up 10,000 bushels here and 5,000 bushels there...or you can call American Grain, tell them you need as much wheat as you do, and let them find it for you.
There are about 48.21 bushels of wheat in 60 cubic feet.
A wheat futures contract covers 5000 bushels of whatever wheat (there are different kinds) is specified in the contract.
After falling to 1.9 billion bushels in 2001 and to 1.6 billion bushels in 2002, wheat production rebounded to 2.3 billion bushels in 2003.
276.5 million bushels.
The plural form of bushel is bushels.
It would take 225 bushels of durum wheat to equal 1 ton of urea.
33 and 1/3 bushels.
It depends on the grain variety, size, moisture content, and so on. Wheat averages 36 to 37 bushels per ton, barley closer to 46 bushels per ton.
120 lbs