Sunday, 4 June 2017

CORN PRICES WILL FOLLOW SUMMER WEATHER, SAYS ANALYST.

This year's corn planting has been a struggle for many, as wet conditions and cool temperatures have either delayed planting or growth. Stand count could be an issue, and this may have been relayed in this week's Crop Progress report released by the USDA on Tuesday, May 30.

Perhaps what stood out on the report was the corn crop condition numbers, even more so than the planting progress numbers (at 91% for the top 18 producing states versus a 5-year average of 93%). Corn rated poor to very poor: 15% in Illinois, 17% in Indiana, 9% in Wisconsin and 12% in Ohio. Yes, it's early in the season. Yet, with a start like this, one can't help but wonder if trend-line yield expectations of 171 bushels are even possible.

If the last decade has taught us anything, it’s that the resilience of farmers, the technologies involved with growing a crop, and cooperative weather all suggest that yield potential is on the rise, and a large and dependable crop will be at hand. Still, Mother Nature does hold the final say. With a prevent plant date for some northern states of June 1, the combination of less-than-ideal spring conditions and the reality that some acres of corn will be switched to soybeans (or not planted at all) could set the stage for a smaller crop.

As summer weather goes, so will prices. If conditions improve, expect little rally potential in corn. At the same time, be prepared for downside potential, as projected carryout will still be viewed as adequate, despite lower acreage. Last year's low in December corn was 3.15. A drop from current levels to the 3.25 area shouldn't be a shock to anyone this year. However, if weather becomes more of a factor, look for the possibility of corn prices rallying faster and further than most expect.

A quick view of the cattle market over the last 3 months is certainly reflective of how a market can change from a very bearish oversupply concern to not enough inventory and a raging bull market. With record demand, corn futures could rapidly move higher, as managed money (which is significantly short the market) switches from short to long, and traders factor in weather issues. Buy stops will likely get triggered, and those that are holding corn in storage could become reluctant sellers, looking for higher value.

For you, as a corn producer, the key is a balanced approach to handle this. Reward rallies and buy calls to protect sales. Our suggestion is to purchase out-of-the-money call options now. If summer weather becomes an issue and prices rally, be disciplined and make sales at designated points. The call options will retain ownership.

If you have questions or comments contact Top Farmer at 1-800-TOPFARM, ext. 129.
Futures trading is not for everyone. The risk of loss in trading is substantial. Therefore, carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. BY BRYAN DOHERTY.

FARMERS GRAIN MARKETING PRACTICES VARY LITTLE, STUDY FINDS.

The latest results from a grain marketing survey conducted by a private firm show similar farmer characteristics that cropped up in Successful Farming’s Benchmarking Marketing survey in 2013.
While the two surveys used different parameters to reach their results, it is interesting to note how they compare when conducted four years apart.

Farmers feel satisfied to mostly satisfied with their grain marketing performance, and larger farmers tend to use more marketing tools than smaller operators. Those were just a few of the survey findings announced this week by Farm Credit Services of America (FCSAmerica), a financial cooperative owned by agricultural producers.

The survey went out to 650 grain producers in nine states throughout the Corn Belt.
At a time when many farmers have worked to lower their operating costs, the survey offers insights about how to optimize the income side of the farm balance sheet, FCSAmerica stated in a press release.

“The survey results highlight that knowing cost of production is the foundation of sound marketing,” said Doug Stark, president and CEO at FCSAmerica, in a press release. “They also highlight the important role that crop insurance plays in supporting both risk management and marketing, not just when there is a crop failure.”

While the FCSAmerica survey found that one third of producers are mostly or completely satisfied with their marketing practices and results, that is lower than the 2013 Successful Farming grain marketing survey that found over three fourths of 1,100 Corn Belt farmers rated their grain marketing performance good-to-excellent.

FCSAmerica’s survey revealed that satisfied marketers are more likely to price as soon as the market offers a profit and to price multiple crop years. They are less likely to sell most of their crop right after harvest or to price based on market fear or cash flow needs, according to the FCSAmerica’s survey results.

Interestingly enough, the 2013 Successful Farming marketing survey highlighted that 33% of farmers’ primary goal in marketing is to manage risk; 20% marketed to enhance price.
Other findings of FCSA’s survey:

– More satisfied than dissatisfied marketers report that they have a good understanding of their cost of production and use it to set an initial price goal. Satisfied marketers are more likely to have written marketing plans.

— On average, producers use four to five marketing tools, the most popular being storage. Also, 82% store grain at least occasionally; one in five always stores.

— Operations of 1,000 or more acres and growers with higher levels of crop insurance employ a fuller range of marketing tools. Producers with revenue protection of at least 80% also are more likely to price prior to harvest.

— More than two thirds use cash forward contracts and spot cash sales; only a quarter of respondents use futures or options.

In 2013, the Successful Farming Grain Marketing Survey results mirrored the FCSAmerica’s survey trends on the use of grain marketing tools. SF’s survey found that 84.1% farmers used cash sales, 47.8% used forward cash contracts, and only 26% used futures contracts.

FCSAmerica’s survey found those 35 and younger are more likely to use hedge-to-arrive contracts and lock in the carry when they store. Younger and larger operators are more likely to use their cost of production to set a marketing price. BY MIKE MCGINNIS.

SMARTER S700 COMBINES, HEADERS INTRODUCED BY JOHN DEERE.

From front to back, John Deere’s 2018 S700 combines, as well as its new headers, feature the most advanced grain-harvesting technology. The series includes four models – S760, S770, S780, and S790 – and have been equipped with improved smart technology and operator comfort.

These machines build on the proven performance of the S600 combines introduced in 2012 and include the latest in automated harvesting technology. A number of these improvements make it easier for you to make adjustments automatically on-the-go.

“These new S700 combines are a culmination of enhancements to our previous model that optimize and automate harvesting operations for coarse and small grains,” says Kevin Ripple, marketing manager for harvest at John Deere. “We’ve enhanced the overall intelligence of these combines by automating more adjustments and calibration tasks, and improved the lifetime durability and productivity of front-end equipment to create a high-performance harvesting solution unlike any other on the market today.”

Combine Advisor

In an effort to maximize the performance of the S700 combines, John Deere has developed the Combine Advisor package. This package incorporates seven technologies to help you set, optimize, and automate the combine to enhance harvesting performance based on crop and field conditions.
One of the functions within Combine Advisor, Auto Maintain is supported with ActiveVision cameras. “These cameras give you a view into the tailings and clean grain elevators via the display, and analyze the information to maintain optimal threshing performance based on operator-set targets,” Ripple explains.

Another feature, Active Yield technology, automatically calibrates the mass flow sensor. This saves time by eliminating the need for manual calibrations and ensures that the best data is collected.
Moving inside, one of the first things to catch your attention will be the new state-of-the-art CommandCenter. This system provides a uniform user experience across the company’s larger tractor and self-propelled sprayer lines, and it underscores customization and operator comfort.

Highlights of the CommandCenter include a Gen 4 interface and monitor with 4600 processor, CommandArm and multifunction control lever with greater ergonomic design and customizable buttons, premium activation with AutoTrac, RowSense and HarvestDoc, and Extended Monitor and mobile device features. Due to more intuitive harvest run and setup screens, setup and start-up are quicker and easier.

You can choose between leather or cloth seats that swivel 7½˚ left and 15˚ right for improved visibility. Seats also feature enhanced ventilation for greater comfort. From the seat, you’ll also notice added grain tank mirrors for improved visibility.

Corn head and platform

Along with the S700 combines, John Deere is introducing the 700C/FC (folding corn head) series corn heads with the RowMax row unit. This row unit provides up to a 50% increase in the life of the gathering chains and includes solid-alloy bushings that reduce pin and bushing wear.

“We’ve also increased the life of the stalk rolls by up to 25% by utilizing a harder material and adding a new wear coating on the front and trailing edges of the blades for increased performance,” says Brittney Guidarelli, product manager for front- end equipment. “As a result, we’ve decreased the cost of operation by reducing how frequently wear parts need to be replaced. You will experience a savings of up to $20,000 over five years compared with previous models.”

The 700C corn heads are available in 6- to 18- row models and in 20-, 22- and 30-inch row widths. The StalkMaster stalk-chopping option is available on all models. Folding corn heads are available on 8- and 12-row units.

If you harvest high-moisture corn, there are several enhancements on the corn head to handle this crop, including an auger floor insert to ease crop handling and a lower auger height to minimize crop damage.

For small grains, Deere introduces the 700D Rigid Draper, which provides a 20% increase in capacity in tough harvesting conditions over its predecessor. The 700D features a top crop auger that’s 50% larger in diameter (now 18 inches) with heavy-duty drives, high-performance gauge wheels, and a center-section seal kit that reduces center-section grain losses by up to 45% in canola.
       
“The new S700 combines are ideal for producers who want to get the most out of their combine, regardless of operator experience or changing field conditions, with quick harvest setup and automatic on-the-go adjustments,” says Cyndee Smiley Dolan, division marketing manager. “The technology, control, and comfort features integrated into this new combine and heads make it the most effective and efficient grain-harvesting solution available.” BY LAURIE BERDORD.

WARM, DRY WEEK MAY STRESS NORTHERN U.S PLAINS SPRING WHEAT

CHICAGO, June 2 (Reuters) - Warm and dry weather is expected to persist in the northern U.S. Plains Spring Wheat Belt through next week, potentially stressing developing wheat, corn, and soybean crops, agricultural meteorologists said.

“It’s dry for the next 10 days, for the most part,” David Streit, a meteorologist with the Commodity Weather Group, said on Friday. “The complicating factor is a fair amount of heat starting to happen up there as well. That’s going to compound the dryness issue.”

Temperatures should reach the 90s Fahrenheit (32° Celsius) this weekend and again next weekend, Streit said.

Dry conditions have recently intensified in the Dakotas and eastern Montana, even as excessive rains have swamped fields farther south, in the southern Plains and the Midwest.

The weekly U.S. Drought Monitor, prepared by a consortium of climatologists, showed 24% of North Dakota was in “moderate drought” as of May 30, up from 6% a week earlier. Nearly the entire state - 99.9% - was rated “abnormally dry,” up from 44% the previous week.

North Dakota is by far the largest producer of spring wheat, a high-protein variety used for bread and for blending with lower-quality wheats.

Grain traders are monitoring the health of the newly planted spring wheat crop in light of concerns about the quality and protein content of the U.S. hard red winter wheat crop, which is being harvested this month in the southern Plains.

If protein levels in the winter wheat crop are low, millers will turn to spring wheat to boost the quality of their flour blends.

Spot spring wheat futures on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange reached $5.90 per bushel on Friday, the highest since January. The premium for spot spring wheat futures over K.C. hard red winter wheat futures was $1.53 per bushel, the widest since December, underscoring fears about supplies of high-protein wheat.

The spring wheat crop was 96% seeded and 79% emerged by May 28, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said. The government rated 62% of the crop as good to excellent, down significantly from 79% a year earlier.

“Hot and dry weather is not unusual in western North Dakota or Montana, (but) this early is the concern,” Jim Peterson, marketing director with the North Dakota Wheat Commission, said on Friday.

For the most advanced spring wheat fields, Peterson said, “You’re already going to temper your yield potential, even if rains do come later.” BY JULIE INGWERSEN.

Friday, 2 June 2017

THE IMPACT OF WET CONDITIONS ON CORN

In 1964 Beck’s planted their first ever Practical Farm Research (PFR)® Plot. Today, Beck’s PFR evaluates over 126 studies, comparing over 150 products across multiple locations throughout the Midwest to learn how different management practices and new technologies perform.
All of this is done with one goal in mind, to provide farmers with the data and information they need to add profitability to their operation.


With so many products, practices and variabilities from season to season, there are also a lot of questions on farmer’s minds. Beck’s set out to find a way to answer these questions in a new series titled #AskPFR.


Recently, many farmers have been concerned with the survivability of their corn seed given the rain events that have been flooding fields throughout the Midwest.

Join Beck's PFR team in the first episode of #AskPFR as they look to answer some of the most common questions we've been asked this year such as "How long can corn seed survive under water?" "How do I make the decision to replant?"is the largest source of unbiased, cutting-edge agronomic information in the industry. More than 110 different studies were conducted in 2016, comparing over 150 products across multiple locations to learn how different management practices and new technologies perform in field environments. In evaluating agronomic practices and input products, not comparing seed products, Beck’s PFR aims to help farmers maximize their input dollars and increase their bottom line. BY BECKS HYBRIDS.

2017 CATTLE OUTLOOK: PRICES HAVENT HIT THE BOTTOM.

The good news for cattle markets: The extreme volatility of the last couple years – the near-100% swings in prices – are behind us and probably aren’t coming back.

More good news: All industry segments are making a little money right now.
Then there’s the bad news: A wall of meat is coming soon – beef, pork, and poultry. It probably means that cattle prices haven’t hit bottom for this cycle.

That’s the summary of the CattleFax annual outlook report delivered at the 2017 Cattle Industry Convention. Here’s the group’s breakdown by industry segment.

Fed cattle

When finished cattle hit $170 per cwt a couple years ago, no one expected it to last. They were right. It bottomed out at about $98 in fall 2016. It’s rebounded since, and that is allowing some profits for feedlots that did a good job of buying calves.

This year, CattleFax’s Kevin Good expects fed prices to average $110, in a range of $98 to $124. It could be a couple more years before the full market bottoms are hit in this stage of the cattle-rebuilding cycle. For now, feeders can buy calves and hedge in profits for a few months, he says.

Feeder cattle

The price for 550-pound weaned calves is expected to average $150 per cwt this year, in a range of $135 to $165. “We believe the average break-even price for cow-calf producers is about $140,” says CattleFax CEO Randy Blach. “For the best producers, that breakeven is probably around $100. So, that segment of the industry stays profitable at least for this year.”

Longer term is more questionable. USDA numbers say we have added 2.5 million cows to the beef-breeding herd in the last three years, about half of that in the Southern Plains, and 230,000 head in Missouri. Credit that to restocking after the drought. We could add another 400,000 cows this year, says Blach. Those calves will hit sale barns in 2018 and 2019.

Cull cows

This segment hit the skids last year and is expected to average only $65 per cwt this year – or lower.

Bred cows

Replacement heifers are a different story. “Normally, we say a bred heifer should be worth about 1.5 to 1.65 times the value of a calf,” says Good.

If the calf is valued at $800, it means a bred heifer is worth around $1,300. While many bred heifer sales are at higher prices than that right now, he thinks they may be overpriced for long-term profit potential.

total meat supply

All three of the major meats are in expansion mode, and that’s scary, says Blach. In the last two years, U.S. farmers produced 5.5 billion pounds more beef, pork, and poultry, 25% of which was exported. The record supplies have cost farmers leverage in the retail market. Two years ago, about 24% of the retail price of beef went to farmers; it’s under 20% now.

In 2017, total meat supplies will be up another 3.2%, pretty evenly split between the three meats. Another sliver of good news: Beef carcass weights appear to have stabilized at 825 pounds, which is 50 pounds more than six years ago.

Trade

It’s the biggest unknown factor for cattle profits,says Blach.
“Keep your eye on it. How the trade deals are reworked by the Trump administration will be VERY important,” he says. BY GENE JOHNSTON.

USDA WLL HELP FARMERS WILL ADAPT TO CLIMATE CHANGE , SAYS PERDUE.

While Democratic lawmakers and farm activists criticized President Trump for his decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Treaty, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue shrugged off climate change as inevitable and said USDA was “committed to digging ever deeper into research to develop better methods of agricultural production in that changing climate.”

“Floods, droughts, and natural disasters are a fact of life for farmers, ranchers, and foresters,” said Perdue in a statement. “They have persevered in the past, and they will adapt in the future – with the assistance of the scientists and experts at USDA.”

Cargill, one of the world’s largest grain processors and foodmakers, said “We have no intention of backing away from our efforts to address climate change in the food and agriculture supply chains around the world, and, in fact, this will inspire us to work harder.” Unlike Trump, who said the Paris Accord would hurt the U.S. economy, Cargill chief executive David MacLennan said, “It would have resulted in U.S. economic growth and job creation.”

“By refusing to limit U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and lead the world in this space, President Trump is allowing increasingly unpredictable and destructive weather to wreak havoc on family farm operations, future generations, and food prices and availability for years to come,” said the National Farmers Union, the second-largest U.S. farm group. The National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, a small-farm advocate, joined NFU in saying climate change mitigation could provide income to farmers through payments for carbon sequestration on their land.

“The next farm bill presents an important opportunity to invest in the programs and policies needed to build resilient farms and ranches, and NSAC will work closely with our partners to ensure those investments are made,” said the coalition.

New York state Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said Trump was “irresponsibly shortsighted” in the decision. “We have irrefutable data that temperatures are rising, Arctic ice is melting, sea levels are rising, and extreme weather is becoming more severe,” she said. Maine Representative Chellie Pingree, a member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee that oversees USDA spending, said, “In Maine, we already see the harmful effects of climate change. Rapidly rising temperatures are causing higher rates of asthma and tick-borne illness, warming oceans are threatening our economy by causing fish and lobsters to migrate, and rising sea levels are jeopardizing coastal communities.”

“Montanans are in a war against climate change. We have experienced increasingly massive wildfires, and our productive agricultural lands have run short on water,” said Steve Charter of the conservation group Northern Plains Resource Council that’s based in Billings, Montana.

DTN said a group of business leaders in 2015 started issuing regional “Risky Business” reports on the risks of climate change. “Among the findings were that farmers in the Midwest were among the industries best equipped to handle the risks, though crop production will continue to shift northward over time,” said DTN. “The same report noted the southeast parts of the U.S. will be most dramatically affected by higher temperatures, which would actually lower agricultural productivity in the region.” BY CHUCK ABBOTT.

PERDUE: WE WONT LET YOU GO HUNGRY BUT THEY ARE LIMITS

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue, who runs the federal farm subsidy and public nutrition programs, told a Montana audience that “my goal is to have a safety net for all American citizens, producers, but also those who cannot afford (food) … It is not in the heart of America to want to see anyone go hungry.”

Speaking at the Montana Ag Summit in Great Falls, Perdue said spending cuts are necessary to get the federal debt under control. For the coming fiscal year, President Trump has proposed a $193 billion cut – 25% – in food stamp spending over 10 years, a 36% cut in crop insurance, elimination of the major U.S. food aid program, a scaling back of land stewardship programs, and the elimination of many rural development programs.

Neither farm subsidies nor food stamps are intended as a permanent support, said Perdue. “Just as we don’t want everybody on a permanent status on food stamps, we don’t want to become dependent,” said Perdue to the farm conference.

“It is not in the heart of America to want to see anyone go hungry. And we don’t want to see that happen,” Perdue said a few minutes into a 16-minute speech. “Americans are compassionate, and the USDA will be compassionate as we administer that program (food stamps). You know, on the other hand, I don’t think it ought to be a permanent lifestyle, either. It ought to be a hand up and a help out to do that,” said Perdue to applause from his listeners.

Perdue’s remarks about Americans not wanting their neighbors to go hungry were a contrast to Representative Adrian Smith, who represents a largely rural district in Nebraska. During an NPR interview, the Republican replied nutrition “is very important” when asked, “Is every American entitled to eat?” Along with food stamps, “there are a number of ways that we could address that,” said Smith. He did not respond directly to a question if he would vote for a budget that cut food stamps. “I look for there to be a lot of changes made in the House and Senate to the president’s budget,” said the sixth-term lawmaker.

Trump’s proposed budget for the fiscal year opening on October 1 would cut food stamps “through a massive cost shift to states, cutting eligibility for millions of households, and reducing benefits for hundreds of thousands more,” said the think tank Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. “The unemployed, the elderly, and low-income working families with children would bear the brunt of the cuts.”

The proposed budget would tighten the time limit on food stamps for able-bodied adults without dependents and would deny food stamps to many households, now eligible due to a welfare-reform provision, who have larger assets than usually allowed but also high housing and child care expenses. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities said 1 million people would be affected by the stricter time limit, and an estimated 1 million households would be affected by the change in so-called categorical eligibility. The Trump budget would require states to pay 25% of benefits but also allow them to reduce the benefit per person.
Some 42.3 million people received food stamps at latest count.

The Trump budget also would limit the availability of federal subsidies to lower the cost of crop insurance. The government pays an average 62¢ of each $1 in premium at present. There would be no premium subsidies for revenue policies that include the harvest price option, popular among farmers. This option pays indemnities at the harvesttime price for a crop if it is higher than the guarantee offered when policies were purchased in the spring. Critics say the option can result in windfall payments.

“Insurance is insurance. Crop insurance is a safety net,” said Perdue, to offset flood, hail, disease, or catastrophically low prices, rather than a routine source of revenue.

In saying that federal spending must be cut, Perdue, born to a Georgia farm family, said farmers are skilled in adjusting to the boom-and-bust cycle of agriculture. “I would trust the U.S. farming community better than anyone else to absorb what our needs are budgetarially … We’re going to make sure it’s a budget we can live with but also one that contributes to the vitality, economic prosperity of not only our generation but also generations to come.”

During a panel discussion with Senate Agriculture chairman Pat Roberts and Montana Senator Steve Daines, Perdue listed a handful of trade issues with China, including delays in approval of new strains of GE crops. Eight requests are pending. Without Chinese approval, crops grown from those seeds cannot be sold to China.

“The president is very, very serious about evening up the balance of trade,” said Perdue. “We think China needs to buy more.” China is the No. 1 market for U.S. farm exports, forecast to buy $22.3 billion of U.S. products this fiscal year while shipping $4.3 million of its ag exports to U.S. buyers. Overall, China runs a large trade surplus with the U.S. BY CHUCK ABBOTT.

WHEAT FUTURE LITTLE CHANGED OVERNIGHT, ETHANOL PRODUCTION BACK UP AS USGC TOUTS BIOFUEL.

1. Wheat Little Changed as Investors Weigh Favorable U.S., Wet Canada Weather
Wheat was little changed in overnight trading, along with corn and beans, as investors weigh dry weather in the U.S. that will aid harvest of winter varieties in the U.S. against wet weather in Canada that’s slowing planting of spring crops.

Dry weather is expected to continue in much of the Southern Plains and eastern Midwest as growers begin to harvest in parts of Texas and Oklahoma, where 100% of winter wheat is headed. That’s weighing on prices as traders know a lot of wheat is about to hit the market.

In Canada, however, spring wheat planting may be delayed due to inclement weather, according to Commodity Weather Group.

Wheat futures for July delivery fell ½¢ to $4.28½ a bushel overnight on the Chicago Board of Trade. Kansas City wheat added ¼¢ to $4.31 a bushel in Chicago.

Corn futures for July delivery was unchanged at $3.70½ a bushel overnight.
Soybeans rose ¾¢ to $9.13 a bushel in Chicago. Soy meal gained 80¢ to $298.30 a short ton, and soy oil lost 0.19¢ to 31.09¢ a pound.
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2. Ethanol Production, Stockpiles Rise Slightly Last Week; Grains Council Touts U.S. Biofuel

Ethanol production in the U.S. bumped back up, albeit only slightly, and inventories of the biofuel rose in the week that ended on May 26, according to the Energy Information Administration.
Output has been pretty steady the past few weeks, hovering just above 1 million barrels a day, on average, for the past four weeks. Production last week totaled 1.02 million barrels, nearing the highest level since March set two weeks ago and up from 1.01 million the prior week, the EIA said in a report.

Inventories, meanwhile, rose to 22.763 million barrels, up from 22.684 million a week earlier, according to the government.

As with production, stockpiles of the biofuel have been basically unchanged for the past several weeks, not fluctuating much since the start of the year.

The U.S. Grains Council (USGC) earlier this week noted that it’s put on two events to provide information about ethanol to other countries. The USGC  put on a workshop in South Korea to outline the global ethanol market and to tout the benefits of the biofuel including improved air quality and lower greenhouse gas emissions.

South Korea has imported 49.1 million gallons of ethanol so far this year.

The USGC also put on an event in Vietnam, which is set to implement an E5 blending rate for the country’s most widely used fuel grade, the agency said. It will move to E10 by 2020.
While Vietnam expects to source much of its ethanol from local sources, the Grains Council encouraged those in attendance at the event to take a look at U.S. ethanol.

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3. Scattered Thunderstorms Expected to Roll Across Midwest, Though Rain Will Be Isolated

Scattered thunderstorms are expected to make their way across eastern Nebraska into western Iowa today, but it’s unlikely any will be severe, according to the National Weather Service.

Thunderstorms are also possible Saturday as a cold front moves into the area, the NWS said.
In parts of central and eastern Iowa, there’s a slight chance of isolated or scattered thunderstorms in much of the region, though the odds of rainfall are slim in most areas, according to the agency.
Moving east, it’s much of the same with “limited” thunderstorm risk for the weekend, the weather service said.

The biggest issue right now is continued flooding along the Mississippi River and its tributaries stretching from northern Missouri all the way into Louisiana. The river is receding in many areas, but it still remains above its banks in some lower-lying areas. BY TONY DREIBUS.

Thursday, 1 June 2017

WHEN A FAMILY OWNED ELEVATOR GOES BELLY UP:BUILDING A BETTER SAFETY NET.

In part three of this four-part series, we look at efforts to update Minnesota legislation in the aftermath of the 2015 Porter Elevator bankruptcy.

It’s not an issue until it affects you. It’s a harsh reality that a number of Minnesota farmers have come to realize with the recent folding of the Porter Elevator in Porter, Minnesota.

As unsecured creditors, farmers who delayed payment or received a bad check for grain sold to the elevator were last on the list when it came time to collect what they were owed.

Leon VanDerostyne, one of the nearly 90 farmers affected, not only received a bad check for his corn but had also delayed payment on his soybeans. While he could make a claim against the $125,000 state bond the elevator had, it didn’t come close to covering the almost $150,000 he was due. When all was said and done, VanDerostyne was only able to recoup about 20% of what his original paycheck should have been for those commodities.

“As we saw with the Porter Elevator bankruptcy, there is serious concern that farmers may be left in limbo without any confirmation they would receive payment for grain sold or credited to the elevator,” says Chris Swedzinski, a Minnesota state representative. “As a farmer myself, I understand the problem that the Porter incident presents.”

Under the current legislation, Minnesota state bonds are calculated based on the gross revenue of an elevator. Because the Porter Elevator’s annual revenue was between $12 million and $24 million, it was only required to have a $125,000 bond (Minnesota statute 223.17).

According to Nick Milanowski, the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) received $2,001,042.45 in claims against the bond from 12 producers.

“All submitted claims, associated paperwork, internal documents, and records from inspector visits were reviewed to determine which claims were valid and which were not,” says the MDA fruit, vegetable & grain unit supervisor, Plant Protection division. “Once final determinations were made, 11 producers who had filed $1,106,435.17 in total claims were found to be valid. In the case of multiple claims, a pro rata share is calculated and dispersed.”

The Legislation History

Minnesota’s first legislation regulating the relationship between elevators and farmers was enacted in the late 1800s. Its main purpose was to try to offset a farmer’s loss should an elevator become insolvent. While there have been changes to the legislation through the years, many believe it has failed to keep up with modern agriculture.

“The statutes were passed when we had small elevators and grain markets didn’t move very much,” says Kevin Stroup, an attorney with Stoneberg, Giles and Stroup, in Marshall, Minnesota. “Today, we have large elevators handling huge dollar amounts and markets that move in much bigger swings. The current system is not set up to cover all of the gyrations and risk.”

This isn’t the first time the legislation has come under fire. A paper written in 1987 by Todd Gillingham, Mitchell Hamline School of Law, cited the increasing number of elevator bankruptcies and outlined the magnitude of the problem. During the 1980s farm crisis, when farmers were struggling to stay solvent, they also had to worry about their local elevator going under, he stated.
His argument for change mirrors what is being heard today. “While some modifications have been made to the legislation through the years, the statutes have failed to keep pace with modern agriculture and its accompanying financial problems,” writes Gillingham.

USDA’s Ned Bergman says that from around 2005 to 2012, when commodity prices were generally good, issues like this were few and far between. In fact, their records show that no elevators licensed under the USDA’s Warehouse Act filed for bankruptcy from 2007 to 2012. Today, the department sees one about every 18 months. Other recent bankruptcy and liquidations include:
  • In 2014, Texoma Peanut Company in Madill, Oklahoma
  • In 2013, G&R Feed & Grain Co. in Portsmouth, Iowa   
“An elevator going bankrupt is obviously something you don’t have to worry about when the ag economy is good, but it is something you have to be aware of when times are bad,” says Swedzinski.

A Call for Change

In an effort to better protect farmers, Swedzinski introduced House File 3186 on March 16, 2016. The bill was coauthored by six other members of the House of Representatives. Senator Gary Dahms authored a companion bill, Senate File 3161, which was heard on March 23, 2016.
House File 3186 would do the following:
  1. Repeal the sales tax on grain bins beginning in 2019.
  2. Establish a grain credit indemnity program that would compensate farmers if a grain elevator files for bankruptcy and is unable to pay for outstanding payments to farmers. The indemnity program is funded using a portion of the sales tax on grain bins.
  3. Direct the commissioner of agriculture to implement a gross receipts sales tax on grain bins in future years – after the sales tax is eliminated in 2019 – if the grain credit indemnity program account is anticipated to be less than $2,000,000. The gross receipts tax turns off if the account will be above $6,000,000. A farmer would get paid up to 80% of what he is owed up to $280,000.
  4. Increase bond amounts for licensed grain buyers, particularly for those who purchase larger amounts of grain. For example, the bond amount for an elevator that had revenue similar to the Porter Elevator would increase from $125,000 to $500,000.
A retroactive date of January 1, 2015, was also included in the bill. This would allow farmers impacted by the closing of the Porter Elevator to receive payments that were due in January 2016.
“The proposed legislation is modeled after a program in North Dakota,” Swedzinski notes.
In general, states have either indemnity funds or bonding programs. North Dakota has both.
“Several years ago, there was an elevator insolvency where the vast majority of claimants were credit sales,” says Konrad Crockford, director of compliance, North Dakota Public Service Commission. “Once a farmer converts a scale ticket into a credit sale contract, he no longer has any protection under the elevator’s bond. The legislature decided to put some protection in place to help offset any future losses.”

Its bond program has two parts: the grain warehouse licensing and bonding program and the grain buyer licensing and bonding program.

“North Dakota licenses warehouses (country elevators) for storage and requires bonding, with a minimum bond of $50,000 up to a maximum of $2 million. The minimum-bond requirements are assessed from a bond schedule based on storage capacity,” he explains. “We also take into account a facility’s throughput. If the annual throughout is seven times the actual physical capacity, we require an additional amount on top of the normal bonding amount.”

In addition, a facility that has been licensed for less than seven years requires a larger bond because it’s seen as high risk. For example, he says a facility licensed for less than seven years that has a million-bushel capacity would require a $455,000 bond. A facility licensed for more than seven years with the same capacity would need a $350,000 bond.

A grain buyer license can be either facility based or issued to a roving grain buyer. The bond amount depends on average sales over the last three years for facility-based and projected annual purchases for the roving grain buyer license. “A facility-based grain buyer would be a grain warehouse that has a federal license but is required to have a state license so it can buy grain,” says Crockford.
The second program is the credit sale contract indemnity fund.

“This fund was established in 2003 to cover credit sale contracts, which is any contract where payment is made more than 30 days from delivery,” says Crockford. “It pays 80% of a claim, up to a maximum of $280,000 per farmer.”

The fund is financed by farmers who are assessed $2 per $1,000 on a credit sale contract sale. Originally, the fund had a $10 million cap. At that point, the assessment stopped until the fund fell to $6 million. In 2007, the maximum was lowered to $6 million, and the minimum was dropped to $3 million.
“We haven’t been collecting that assessment since 2008,” he says. “When that fund gets down to $3 million, it will turn back on.”Ultimately, Minnesota’s proposed bill didn’t pass.

“If it works in North Dakota, I don’t understand why it wouldn’t work in Minnesota,” says VanDerostyne. “If it’s a question of cost, I believe the basis would be widened to offset the cost of the indemnity fund, which would ultimately come back to the farmer.”

“There’s not an easy fix when you’re dealing with trying to create accounts that are going to cover a farmer’s losses in situations like this. We got a lot of resistance on both the indemnity fund and raising the bond amounts,” Swedzinski says. “We’re going to work with stakeholders to come up with a better funding mechanism and will reintroduce it later this year.”

To see what type of producer protection your state has in place, visit The Association of Grain Regulatory Officials’.
Bob Zelenka, Minnesota Grain and Feed Association, says one thing people need to understand is that bonding is not insurance.

“Bonding is a screening mechanism,” he explains. “Essentially, the third party that is providing the bond is the one that’s doing the in-depth analysis of a facility and determining if that risk is manageable. Ultimately, it’s how it is determined whether to provide a bond or not. If everybody does their job correctly, there shouldn’t be any losses.”

Raising the bond amount, says Al Kluis, will not solve the underlying issue.
“All that raising the bond does is pass the increase on to legitimate elevators,” says the grain commodity trader and market analyst. “These elevators are dealing with big numbers. Whoever was auditing the Porter Elevator should have realized there was an issue. Why have audits and pay fees if a problem like this is not caught? Auditing, to me, is where the buck stops.”

“If you’re a publicly traded organization, your books are made public and you can see what kind of condition the company is in,” Swedzinski says. “When you’re privately held, like Porter was, you only have to show what you want people to see. You can paint an awfully rosy picture when in reality, you’ve got some deep, dark secrets to hide.”

As a federally licensed warehouse, the elevator was required to submit an audit or review level financial statement annually to the deputy administrator for commodity operations (DACO), and it must correspond with the warehouse’s fiscal year-end. In addition, a warehouse has 120 days from fiscal year-end to submit the statement. As the FSA designee, the DACO is responsible for administering the provisions and regulations of the U.S. Warehouse Act to elevators. This includes the acceptance of applications such as financial statements, the issuance of warehouse licenses, and conducting warehouse examinations for compliance purposes.
According to the licensing agreement for grain and rice warehouse operators, those financial statements, at the very least, must include (1) a balance sheet; (2) a statement of income (profit and loss); (3) a statement of retained earnings; (4) a statement of cash flow; and (5) notes to the financial statement. A detailed list of company-owned inventories, including unpaid grain must be included in the notes. 

In addition, those required documents had to be reviewed or audited by a certified public accountant or an independent public accountant, as approved by the DACO.
The operator of the elevator also had to certify, under penalty of perjury, that the statements submitted, as prepared, accurately reflected the financial condition of the elevator.

The review of financial statements is done by commodity operations financial reviewers located in FSA’s office in Kansas City, Missouri. The reviewers are trained specialists and technical experts. A USDA spokesman says the Porter Elevator’s fiscal year-end was August 31, and the business has 120 days from that date to submit the statement. The last statement it submitted was reviewed by FSA financial reviewers in November 2014, which reflected close of business as of August 31, 2014. Because the elevator was licensed under the Warehouse Act, its financial statements are considered confidential and are not available from the USDA as a public record.

In addition, warehouse examinations are performed by warehouse examiners who conduct inventories and assessments of grain in storage, review grain records, compare inventory results to book records, review operating procedures, and randomly test records of the licensed warehouse. They do not review the financial statement of the licensed warehouse because of the specialized technical skill required and the time required to assemble a factual statement that is prepared according to generally accepted accounting practices (GAAP). According to the USDA spokesperson, the last FSA warehouse examination took place on February 12, 2014.

At the state level, the Porter Elevator was not required to file annual statements with the Department of Agriculture.

“The federal license is solely executed by the USDA, and has no coordination with the state or its required documents,” says Milanowski. “Statute 223.17 states that the commissioner may require financial statements, and if they are requested, then outline the standards it must meet.”
It was, however, subject to inspections.

“The last exam from a state examiner was on November 5, 2015. The elevator’s obligations were evaluated as it relates to its grain buying license,” he says. “At the time of inspection there was no indication, based on its daily position report and other requested documents, that the Porter Elevator could not meet its grain buying obligations.”

With what seemed like solid checks and balances in place, many were left scratching their heads over what went wrong.

“This is not the old days where grain moved 5¢ in a year and there’s not much risk. Today, grain markets are moving $2 up, $2 down,” says Greg Bucher, an attorney with Stoneberg, Giles and Stroup. “If somebody sells high and doesn’t hedge, they’re not capitalized to cover these losses. Grain elevators are operating on a fairly thin margin. They don’t make enough money to cover unhedged positions if there’s a big movement in the market.”
It also begs the question – were there signs?

“The financial troubles brewing at the Porter Elevator were well hidden,” says Kluis, who works with farmers who did business with the elevator. “I’ve been in business for 40 years. I’ve heard rumors in the past that a company was going to go under and then it went under. There were no rumors with the Porter Elevator. They were just done.”

“When it went down and we started making calls, it was clear from comments by creditors that they’d been in serious financial trouble for a long time,” says Stroup.

“I think there were some farmers who could have and should have seen the signs, but they chose to stick with it because of the history they had with the owners,” says Zelenka.

“How are farmers expected to see the signs when an audit didn’t show that something was wrong?” questions VanDerostyne.

“This was a family-owned operation and had been for a number of years,” adds Stroup. “It’s why people were so comfortable with them.”

Unfortunately, they were too comfortable. But hindsight is 20/20. What matters most going forward is ensuring that farmers do their due diligence.

“Farmers need to have a good sense about who they’re doing business with and understand that business as best they can because you can only do so much with regulations and legislation,” says Zelenka.
In the final installment of this four-part series, experts share insights on ways farmers can be proactive in protecting their paychecks. Part four will be posted on Thursday, June 8. 

HOW WE REPORTED THE STORY

Laurie Bedord, Advanced Technology Editor, first learned about the Porter Elevator bankruptcy in February 2016. At the time, farmers were hesitant to talk because the investigation was ongoing and it was still a very sensitive subject in the community. Nine months later, she began contacting farmers who did business with the elevator, a vendor hired by the elevator, two attorneys who offered legal advice to some of the parties affected, as well as a representative from the Minnesota Department of Agriculture and USDA officials involved in the case.

Bedord also interviewed a Minnesota state representative working to change the legislation affecting elevator insolvencies. In addition, she spoke with the North Dakota Public Service Commission to compare the legislation it has in place with Minnesota to protect farmers in an elevator bankruptcy situation.

Hundreds of pages of court documents provided detailed information on the financial situation of the family-owned elevator as well as the names of the numerous farmers, suppliers, and vendors affected by the bankruptcy. BY LAURIE BERDORD.