Tag Archives: agriculture

Deere Reports Record 2Q Earnings – Analyst Blog

By Zacks.com ,  May 15, 2013 Driven by higher sales of farm machinery, Deere & Company ( DE ) reported record second quarter fiscal 2013 earnings of $1.08 billion or $2.76 per share compared with $1.056 billion or $2.61 per share earned in the prior-year quarter. Reported earnings per share were ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $2.74 per share. Operational Update Deere’s worldwide total sales increased 9% year over year to $10.9 billion, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $9.8 billion. Net sales of equipment operations (which comprise Agriculture and Turf, Construction and Forestry) were $10.3 billion, a 9% year-over-year increase including a price rise of 3% offset by an unfavorable currency translation effect of 2%. Region-wise, equipment net sales were up 9% in the United States and Canada and 9% in rest of the world. Cost of sales in the quarter climbed 9% to $7.48 billion. Selling, administrative and general expenses increased 8% to $956 million. Operating profit improved 8% year over year to $2.1 billion in the quarter. Operating income of equipment operations increased 9% to $1.66 billion as price realization, lower raw material costs and higher shipment volumes helped offset increased production costs and higher selling, administrative and general expenses and unfavorable effects of foreign-currency exchange. Segment Performance The Agriculture & Turf segment sales increased 12% to $8.69 billion, attributable to higher shipment volumes and improved price realization, partially offset by a negative currency translation. Operating profit of the segment improved 13% to $1.58 million. The increase in operating profit was based on higher shipment and improved price realization, partially offset by increases in selling, general and administrative expenses, production costs as well as unfavorable effects of foreign exchange . Construction & Forestry experienced a 6% year-over-year decline in sales to $1.57 billion, due to lower shipment volumes. The segment operating profit plunged 32% year over year to $81 million, driven by lower shipment, higher production costs along with higher selling, general and administrative and research and development expenses, which offset the benefit from improved price realization. Net revenue at Deere’s Financial Services operations was $536 million in the reported quarter, up 10% year over year. Net income in this segment was $125 million compared with $109 million in the year-ago quarter. The improvement stemmed from growth in the credit portfolio and higher crop insurance margins, partially offset by increased selling, administrative and general expenses. Financial Position As of Apr 30, 2013, Deere had cash and cash equivalents of $3.65 billion, up from $3.02 billion as of Apr 30, 2012. Long-term borrowings increased to $21.7 billion as of Apr 30, 2013 from $18.7 billion as of Apr 30, 2012. The company used net cash flow for operating activities of $1.16 billion during the first half of fiscal 2013 compared with $1.53 billion in the prior-year comparable period. Looking Forward Deere expects equipment sales to grow around 3% in the third quarter of fiscal 2013 and 5% for the full year. Net income is projected at $3.3 billion for fiscal 2013. Segment-wise, Deere expects worldwide sales of Agriculture and Turf equipment to grow 7% in fiscal 2013. Higher commodity prices and strong farm incomes are expected boost demand for farm machinery during the year. Furthermore, Deere’s sales are expected to benefit from global expansion and new lines of advanced equipment. Region-wise, Deere expects industry farm-machinery sales in the U.S. and Canada to increase 5% year over year in 2013. In Europe, sales are projected to be down 5% due to continued deterioration in the overall economy and the poor harvest in the U.K. last year. Sales in the Commonwealth of Independent States are expected to witness a slight decline. Sales in Asia are expected to be flat year-over-year. Industry sales of turf and utility equipment in the U.S. and Canada are expected to be flat-to-down slightly year-over-year due to cool, wet spring in North America and reflecting a cautious consumer outlook. Construction & Forestry equipment are expected to decline 5% in 2013, driven by cool, wet weather conditions in North America, flat sales in world forestry markets and reflecting a cautious outlook for U.S. economic growth. Weakness in the European markets will continue to affect the forestry markets. Net income from Financial Services is estimated at around $550 million. Our View Given the increased global demand for food, shelter and infrastructure, we believe that the long-term outlook for Deere remains strong. Deere will benefit from relatively high commodity prices and strong farm incomes, recovery in construction sector and strength in Brazil. However, continued weakness in the European markets, additional import duty imposed in Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus, margin headwinds which include higher production costs associated with interim Tier 4 as well as global growth expenses remain concerns. Moline, IL-based Deere is engaged in the production and distribution of agricultural and forestry equipment, construction equipment and engines worldwide. The company sells products in the U.S. and Canada through branch offices as well as through distributors and dealers for the resale of products internationally. Deere currently holds a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). Other stocks in the industrial products sector with a favorable Zacks Rank are Alamo Group, Inc. ( ALG ), AO Smith Corp. ( AOS ) and CNH Global NV ( CNH ) with a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) Read more: http://www.nasdaq.co…8#ixzz2TQoTQtrI Continue reading

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The Paradoxes Of EU Agricultural Policy

The European Union is among the world’s top five exporters of agricultural products with USA, Brazil, China and Argentina, and it is among the world’s top five importers of agricultural products with USA, China, Japan and Russia. Agriculture is one of the most important sectors of social and economic development within the EU. Over the years, the aims of EU agricultural policy have been to develop a competitive economy and create harmony among EU Countries. However, the result of this work has been a fragmented, contradictory, and unworkable legislative framework that threatens economic disaster. A review on the paradoxes of European agricultural policies will be published soon on the Journal Trends in Plant Science . In this review, the authors present case studies, in which the differences in the regulation applied to food grown in EU Countries and to the same imported products are noted. The highlighted differences show that the EU is hampering its own competitiveness in agriculture and consequently damaging both the EU and its humanitarian activities in the developing world. The review is especially focused on genetically engineered crops. It is not clear why the common agricultural policy (CAP) establishes restrictive measures for EU agricultural productions but the same measures are not observed for the same products imported from the countries where genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are authorized and thresholds of mycotoxines are lower. This is only one of the several paradoxes of the EU agricultural policy that, giving strict thresholds only to its own productions, is reducing the competitiveness of European agricultural on the world market. Another example of political inefficiency regards the subsidies policy that has a positive effect in short time but is not a significant tool to develop a competitive economy in the long term. The authors underline the need to implement the biotechnological findings, to harmonize and rationalize the common policy on both the EU production and genetically engineered crops importation, to harmonize the current measures of Member States and reduce the differences among them, to decentralize the rural economy measures and allow the farmers to use cost-saving technologies that can enhance the sustainability of the agricultural systems, etc. Finally, the authors conclude recommending the adoption of rational, science-based strategies to harmonize the different agricultural policies to prevent the economic decline and the reduction of living quality across the European Union. Source: Masip G., Sabalza M., Perez-Massot E., Banakar R., Cebrian D., Twyman R.M., Capell T., Albajes R., Christou P., ‘ Paradoxical EU agricultural policies on genetically engineered crops ’, Trends in Plant Science , 2013, in press. Publication date: 5/9/2013 Author: Emanuela Fontana Continue reading

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Agriculture Minister: 5 bln Euros In EU Funds Effectively Enter Romanian Beneficiaries’ Accounts

Tuesday, May 14, 2013 Romania has so far drawn nearly 5 billion euros worth of the European Union funds earmarked under the National Rural Development Programme, with such money having effectively entered the beneficiaries’ accounts and having been repaid by the European Commission, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Daniel Constantin told AGERPRES in an interview on Monday. ‘Last year, the absorption under the National Rural Development Programme amounted to 3.7 billion euros and today it has reached 5 billion euros. We’ve recorded 1.3 billion euros increase over a year and I think it is a significant increase, for only one programme, the more so since the money has been paid the beneficiaries and repaid by the European Commission to Romania’, Constantin stressed. He underscored that his ministry, last year, managed to get an additional 100 million euros, given that the Romanian agriculture was hit by a droughty span and 6 billion lei was injected via the Agriculture Payments Agency. ‘We managed to get an additional 100 million euros to the ministry budget last year, an unprecedented fact since 1989. The Government has proved it is concerned with the agriculture not only when harvesting the crops, there are collections to the budget and we have economic growth. The fact we gave 100 million euros in a year when we did not have a very good crop was a very good signal for me, I think, but for the farmers first and foremost. This year we finalised all the payments via the Payments Agency in only two months, namely March and April, which means there was an inflow of six billion lei to the Romanian farming, although I would say it was to the Romanian economy, because such an amount was invested and bolstered the consumption and also the payment of taxes and duties to the budget. If things look well now, it is also due to the money inflow via the Payments Agency. It is for the first time that the Agency manages to pay all the funds it had available so fast’, Constantin explained. According to figures supplied by the Agency for Rural Development and Fisheries Payments (ADFP), European funds for investment projects amounting to 17.92 billion euros had been claimed by end-April, with around 141,000 projects having been filed. The funds committed via the National Rural Development Programme for the rural area’s development total 5.21 billion euros, while there are as many as 65,193 contracted projects for being financed by EU funds. As much as 4.94 billion euros has entered the beneficiaries’ accounts, with 2.78 billion euros of it being for investment projects and 2.16 billion euros for the compensatory payments made by the ADFP. Continue reading

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