by Pops » Thu 08 May 2008, 14:31:37
Thanks for all the thoughtful replies, I've heard that the planting progress on corn is quite a bit behind right now because of all the wet weather.
The problem with corn planted late is it then matures in the dry hot season substantially reducing harvest since the ears don't fill out and even the kernels don't get as big.
----
This is a description of the boom in ag in the 1970's from
this USDA report (PDF).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ncreased farm income, rising inflation,
readily available credit, and low to negative
real interest rates led to sustained
increases in farmland values and in outlays
for farm machinery and equipment.
Because financial assets lose value with
inflation while real assets gain value, rising
inflation encourages investors to shift
their holdings from financial to real
assets. Such a shift exacerbates the loss
for financial assets but strengthens the
gain for real assets, including farmland.
Sound familiar?
Here is the situation that lead to the bust of the '80's:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')y the early 1980s, many of the factors
that spurred the boom were reversing.
Commodity prices fell, input prices and
interest rates rose, export demand turned
down, and farm income declined. Many
farmers who had bought land or made
other long-term investmentsespecially
those who used debt financingnow had
difficulty meeting their other financial
obligations or even making a living.
Colorado Valley mentioned the increasing population generating demand. Today there is big demand for pork both here and abroad and it is no surprise since pork is fantastically cheap. The last report I saw said hog farmers are getting $75-$90 a head on hogs they paid more than $200 to raise.
They were fat and sassy until corn went through the roof and I'd bet they took on a good deal of debt for capital improvements. Even thought the packers can't get enough the price hasn't budged.
The producer goes broke, the supply goes down, consumer prices rise and demand falls.
Looks to me like either way consumer prices rise, affecting demand for pork and because piggies like corn and lots of it; directly impacting the corn market.
Just because there are more people doesn't necessarily mean they will be all eating the same expensive foods, probably the opposite considering the negative influence higher energy prices are bound to have on food budgets.