Tag Archives: chat
Notes from the Kansas City Fed Agricultural Symposium July 2013
August 6th, 2013 This is one of the slides that Mike Boehlje of Purdue showed during the July KCFRB agricultural symposium. There was a global cropland expansion of 147 million acres in the past eight years. Most of these acres came from South America, the FSU, and East Asia, and most of those acres went into growing corn, followed by soybeans. Note that some of the added acres are from double cropping. ********* In mid-July, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City hosted its annual agricultural symposium titled, “The Shifting Nexus of Global Agriculture.” I considered attending but did not, so instead I read the twitter feeds of those who tweeted the event and there are some good nuggets in the (modified) tweets which follow. 1) From speaker Mike Boehlje, Professor at the Dept. of Agricultural Economics, Purdue: • Citing a new report he had just seen in the WSJ, Boehlje said that the IMF had decreased projections for world economic growth for the 4th quarter in a row. He said that this article has huge implications for agriculture including in China, India, and Brazil, too. • Don’t drink the Kool-aid that the agribusiness sector is feeding. Growth in INCOME counts, not population growth. ( K.M. Note: This was my favorite quote from this whole post, as I about go ballistic every time I see that “How are we going to feed… ” headline, which is far too often and gets the question wrong! …there are many other things that count besides growth in income, too, but it most certainly isn’t just about production.) • Boehlje said he’s a pessimist on long-term U.S. livestock industry competitiveness, which was based on cheap feed. The U.S. demand for animal protein is “mature at best and probably declining.” Larger multinationals may well off-shore production. He named 12 things to watch: • EU debt crisis • U.S. economic recovery • changing value of the USD • unpredictable Asian growth • current short crop supplies – weather supply shocks • livestock regulations • increased global acreage for crops • farm policy uncertainty • interest rates • fertilizer, seed, chemical, energy prices (input costs) • farm income and land values • counterparty risk 2) Univ. of Missouri’s Pat Westhoff: • Don’t count on $7 corn “unless the world changes in very fundamental ways.” He sees sub-$5 corn the next 10 years. 3) Gavilon’s Ray Wyse: • The FAO food index has tripled since the RFS was implemented, and land prices have increased five fold. • There are still more acres to be had in the FSU region, and double cropping is growing steadily around the world. • Some people are now looking at the People’s Republic of Congo as “the next Brazil.” • Is it possible to double-crop corn in certain regions of the U.S. as Monsanto develops shorter season varieties? • We will miss our corn export market when its gone. 4) Texas A&M economist Joe Outlaw: • You don’t write a farmbill for the good years, you write it for the bad years. Policy makers have to focus on that reality. 5) Next, are a few tweets about farmland. Sorry, I don’t have all of the sources of the quotes. • In fiscal 2012, Farmers National Company has sold more than 600 farms, for over $450 million. Active farmers continue to dominate the buy-side of the market. • Investors purchased between 25-30% of FNC’s 2012 sales. Traditional investors about half, non-traditional investors growing. • Jim Farrell: A new phenomenon we’re seeing is the 80+ year old cash buyer. He’s doing this since there’s no return on investment in CD’s or other “safe” investments. ( K.M. Note: I’ve also seen this going on with home purchases where I live here in Boulder, Colorado. You’d think 75 year olds would downsize, but instead they upsize – presumably for a place to safely invest with a better chance of return on their investment.) • Joseph Bond: Ag expansion in the Black Sea region will require billions of dollars of investment in modern agriculture techniques. • William Mott: More concerned about infrastructure and logistics costs with international farming operations than cost of production. 6) Informa’s Kenneth Eriksen: • There are “center pivots going up all over the map” in central and southern Illinois. Continue reading
Surge Of Investment In Farming Threatens £5trn Catastrophe
TOM BAWDEN FRIDAY 09 AUGUST 2013 The threat posed to agriculture by environmental hazards such as climate change and water scarcity is now so great that it could wipe as much as £5 trillion off the value of the world’s farm land, equipment and stock in any one year, a heavyweight study is warning. Agriculture in the UK and worldwide is under huge financial and physical stress. A surge of investment on the back of a boom in the global food commodities market meets an increasingly precarious physical environment for farming – creating a dangerous asset bubble that threatens to burst, according to the Oxford University research. As a result, the total value of the world’s estimated $14trn worth of “farmland assets and agricultural capital stock” could see trillions of dollars wiped off its value in a single year – with a one in 20 chance that the figure could hit $8trn (£5.2trn) the report said. “Potential losses at this scale would be catastrophic and no private insurer could cope. This is going to be an issue in the UK and globally,” said Ben Caldecott, programme director at the University of Oxford’s Smith School, adding that he was not able to quantify the risk for Britain. The research team based their risk estimates on traditional insurance methodologies and stressed that an $8trn devaluation would only result from an environmental catastrophe. “It could be a tipping point in biodiversity decline or habitat degradation making agricultural zones significantly less productive. Or, more likely, a combination of things coming together,” he said. But the chance of smaller, but still enormous, write-offs across the global agricultural industry in the coming years is high, as, for example, increasing cases of drought and flooding make land less productive and the influx of investors becomes an exodus. This would have far-ranging and unexpected consequences across the world, the report finds. “For example, the Arab Spring has demonstrated how water supply constraints in North Africa, coupled with extreme weather in Russia can affect food security and prices and contribute to governmental collapse and broader geopolitical tension,” the report said. The report doesn’t predict which parts of the world would be hit hardest by environmental hazards, how they might suffer or what it would mean for food supplies and future investment in farming. However, farming experts said any environmental misfortune big enough to prompt huge write-downs would clearly have a huge impact on food supplies, as well as future investment in farming. It could also hit people’s pensions because many of the investors that have piled into the agriculture sector in recent years have been pension funds. Farmland is increasingly bought as an investment, to be managed by another party, rather than by farmers. Financial institutions see it as an opportunity to improve their returns by switching their money from flagging stock markets into fast growing agricultural land and food production. But Mr Caldecott warns they could be in for a shock because many have based their decision on whether to buy into farming on financial models that largely ignores the dangers posed by environmental risk factors. “The amount of value potentially at risk globally is significant,” Mr Caldecott said, drawing an analogy between the financial crisis that is still hurting the global economy and the problems faced by agriculture. “The financial crisis has highlighted how the relationship between the owners of an asset and the actual physical asset can become disconnected in the chase for increasing financial returns,” Mr Caldecott said, referring to the packaging up of thousands of high-risk US subprime mortgages into bonds that resulted in huge banking losses that are widely regarded to have triggered the recession. “It also highlighted how investments which can be viewed as completely rational within one set of analytical and institutional structures can nevertheless be completely irrational outside those structures. The orthodoxy of not valuing environmental externalities is one such set structure that is coming under increasing pressure for change,” he added. The environmental risk factors include increasing weather variability and water scarcity, loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services, increased risk of agricultural diseases, viruses and pests and overfishing. The report notes, for example, that “in a warmer climate, there will be an increased risk of more intense, more frequent and longer lasting heatwaves… models project increased summer dryness and winter wetness in most parts of northern, middle and high latitudes.” Economic factors include greenhouse gas and land use regulations, which are designed to help the environment, but will reduce the value of farmland, at least in the short term. The growth in agricultural land values has been phenomenal, recording a four-fold increase in the past 10 years, and is still growing fast in most parts of the world since. In the UK, prime arable farmland – a benchmark – has more than tripled to £8,000 an acre in the past decade, according to Savills, recording a 6 per cent rise in the first half of 2013 alone. Continue reading
Latvian Forestry Earnings Up, Despite Drop In Sales Volume
A reduction in the logging of state forests throughout the last 12 months has led to a fall in the availability of Latvian logs, which has caused prices to rise. Traditionally, UK markets have attempted to resist paying inflated amounts, but with supply declining steadily, they have been required to follow other countries in doing so, the Timber Trades Journal reports. In 2012, there was a 12 per cent reduction in the volume sold by Latvian State forests (LVM), but earnings climbed higher as a result of increased prices and improved efficiency. Heavy snowfall was a feature of the harsh recent winter and in December, around 200,000 m3 of the country’s woodland was removed due to the damage caused. However, this led to a €2 million investment from LVM in new acquisitions of private sector forests, resulting in the addition of an extra 1,500 hectares. In the UK, there has been “stronger-than-expected” demand for Latvian plywood, with customers believed to be making preparations ahead of the typical summer mill closures, which have seen production cease until the second week of August. According to the report, inventories are said to be at extremely low levels as large amounts were sold prior to the July closures. UK stocks are also believed to be minimal and Latvian mills have typically extended lead times to between ten and 12 weeks. Prices for plywood produced in the country increased in May and a further rise of as much as five per cent is expected when production restarts. The situation in Sweden is much the same, with a shortage of the sawlogs required by independent mills leading to a surge in prices. Swedish softwood exports to Europe declined by 11 per cent year-on-year in the first four months of 2013, with redwood exports falling by 15 per cent. Meanwhile, trade in Asian markets has risen, with redwood exports to Japan up by 18 per cent and those to China nine per cent higher over the same period. HD FestForest provides forest management in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and is a subsidiary company of HedeDanmark. Continue reading