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Sunbelt Ag News

Doane Closing Cotton Commentary

Peanut Harvest Starts In Georgia, South Carolina - Some Fields Ahead Of Schedule 9-02

DTN Livestock Close: Meat futures scored decent progress across the board 9-02

AFB Rice Close: Stopped The Downturn Of The Past Two Days And Ended Higher 9-02

Soybean Insects Still Piling Up In Southeast And Delta, Treatments Continue 9-02

AFB Cotton CLose: Blasted Through The Long Term Chart Resistance 9-02

AFB Grain-Soybean Close: Soybeans And Wheat Ended Higher 9-02

Panama Canal Authority And Mississippi State Port Authority Sign Partnership Agreement 9-02

DTN Cotton Close: Follow-through buying powers create new highs 9-02

DTN Grain Close: With a late push, corn and bean contracts joined wheat's high 9-02

Rice Yield Slump Continues, With Prospects For Lower Averages Possibly Ahead 9-02

DTN Livestock Midday: Futures rally 9-02

DTN Grain Midday: Light trade, wheat higher 9-02

Linn Corn: Lower yields, big demand push market higher 9-02

Linn Soybeans: Strong moves by corn and wheat not enough to boost soybeans 9-02

Virginia Cotton: Defoliation begins 9-02

Criminals see opportunity in...rice? Wall Street Journal Blog 9-02

DTN Grain Open: Grain contracts subdued overnight following corn and wheat rally 9-02

DTN Livestock Open: Set to open mixed 9-02

Keith Good Farm Policy: Ethanol v. Gasoline Prices; USDA and Roundup Ready Sugar Beets 9-02

Covering the Basis: The Wheat Market Situation 9-01

USDA Responds to Deregulation of Roundup Ready Sugar Beet Case 9-01

Diesel Price Update: Down Slightly 9-01

Cotton Pickers Start Rolling In Tennessee, Defoliation Going On A Wider Basis In The Midsouth 9-01

Cotton Picking Starts In Georgia, Defoliation Gaining Momentum In Southeast 9-01

Arkansas Cotton: Micronaire Defoliation Alert Issued On 2 Cotton Varieties 9-01

DTN MBAg by Adam Erwin: Non-Scientific Causes of Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS) in Soybeans 9-01

DTN Cotton Open: Wipes Out Modest Losses to Trade Ahead 9-01

Creditors of bankrupt Verasun demand farmers pay up or get sued 8-31

Arkansas and South Dakota farmers compare who had a dryer summer, SD wins 8-31

When No-till Continuous Corn Doesn't Work, Try Vertical Tillage 8-31

Texas and New Mexico: Peanut Field Day on Sept. 8 near Brownfield 8-31

Georgia Cotton And Peanut Field Day Set For September 8 In Tifton 8-31

U.S. Rice Sale to Iraq Confirmed 8-30

Did August Weather Reduce Corn Yield Potential? 8-30

Louisiana Wheat Acreage Expected To Increase 8-30

Manufacturers Unveil Tillage Tools 8-30

NASS Field Surveys Under Way 8-30

Fertilizer prices are staying firm on tight supply 8-30

Soybean Rust: North Carolina Reports Its First Find Of 2010 8-30

Virginia: Tidewater Late-Season Field Crops tour, September 14 8-27

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Arkansas: Figuring The 2010 Crop Mix On Farm-By-Farm Basis

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Fuel and fertilizer costs, crop futures prices and rent arrangements are among the dozens of factors Arkansas farmers will have considered before planting this spring, said Scott Stiles, extension agricultural economist-risk management for the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture.

 

The answers that come up on their spreadsheets will shape the state’s crop profile in 2010.

 

"At planting time, the competition for acreage remains strong among corn, soybeans, rice, and cotton," he said. "A number of factors come into play in the final planting decision. Yield potential, cost of production, basis, gin incentives, and commodity prices are just a few considerations."

 

The December 2010 futures price for cotton was 75.4 cents per pound on April 7; September 2010 corn, $3.66 per bushel; September 2010 rice, $12.67 per hundredweight, and November soybeans, $9.32 per bushel.

 

"Crop mix decisions must be made on a farm-by-farm basis," Stiles said. For example, "it’s critical for growers to evaluate their budgets, yield potential, and rent arrangements to determine the price level needed for their 2010 crops," he said.

 

"Rent arrangements alone can influence a grower’s break-even price by several cents per pound or bushel."

 

Production inputs include such things as seed, fertilizers, chemicals, fuel, labor, custom services, and repairs.

 

"Fertilizer and some herbicides are expected to be priced lower this year," Stiles said. "Seed costs are stable to slightly higher. Fuel costs for most operations will definitely be higher assuming we don’t have repeat of 2009 rainfall."

Stiles offered this overview of cost concerns for fertilizer and fuel.

 

Fertilizer - Since bottoming last October and trending higher throughout the last quarter of 2009, fertilizer prices have moved very little in any direction this spring. The sharp drop in wheat acres cut into early spring fertilizer demand. A lower bias in the grain markets is also keeping fertilizer prices flat.

 

Compared to late March 2009, many of the major fertilizers have decreased in price. Diammonium phosphate, or DAP, is now 10 percent lower, 32 percent UAN (urea of ammonium nitrate) is 24 percent lower, potash 39 percent lower, and urea (46 percent nitrogen) is 9 percent lower.

 

A rally in both the grains and energy markets could pull fertilizer prices higher. Normally, grains and energy prices strengthen from March into late June.

Getting the 2010 crop planted will be of particular interest to the fertilizer market. Due to the wet weather and late harvest, very little fertilizer was applied last fall. Given the prospect of increased acreage in corn, cotton, and rice, there will be a surge in demand for nitrogen over the next 60 to 90 days.

 

Fuel - Producers will likely see higher fuel costs this year compared to 2009. Over the past month, crude oil prices have fluctuated from $79 to $83 per barrel. Since the first of April, prices have surged higher to $87 per barrel.

 

The Energy Department’s Energy Information Agency projections for West Texas Intermediate crude oil prices have remained stable over the last five months. The EIA expects West Texas Intermediate prices to remain above $80 per barrel this summer, and average about $81 per barrel this year.

 

In April 2009, crude oil prices were trading in the range of $55 to $65 per barrel with farm level diesel prices ranging from $1.65 to $1.95 per gallon.

 

Assuming crude oil prices average $81 per barrel in 2010, farm level prices for diesel will be near $2.30 per gallon.

 

For more information on budgeting, contact your county extension office, visit www.uaex.edu, or see the Farm Management and Marketing Newsletter at www.aragriculture.org/News/farmmgmt/2010/March2010.pdf

 

The Cooperative Extension Service is part of the University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture and offers its programs to all eligible persons regardless of race, color, national origin, religion, gender, age, disability, marital or veteran status, or any other legally protected status, and is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.


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Upcoming Events:

(FD: field day; SS: scout schools)

Texas and New Mexico Peanut Field Day, Sept. 8, 5 to 8 p.m. Delwin Marrow Barn near Brownfield

Georgia Cotton And Peanut Field Day, Tifton, September 8, 9 a.m.

Tennessee Cotton Field Day, September 8, Jackson, W. Tenn. REC

Virginia: Late-Season Field Crops Tour, Sept. 14, Virginia Tech Tidewater REC, Suffolk

Georgia Peanut Tour, September 14-16, More Information Inside (701)

West Texas Deer Research Group meeting,September 16-17 at Kingsville

California Almond Industry Conference, December 7-9, Modesto

Mississippi: 2010 USA Rice Outlook Conference, Dec. 8-10, Biloxi 8-11