I'm not sure if you cowboys have been reading the commodity forum so I am posting an invitation to go and read what's going on.
An even better read might be Parsley's Notebook.
I invite you all to read about the great benefit our "single desk" marketer has achieved for wheat and malt barley growers over the past few years.
We have a central purchasing agency who gets to decide on the price they will sell farmers produce at and then deduct their salaries and costs and then dole out the remainder to the growers of that product.
Now we are learning of the ways they have been speculating in the futures markets without adequate protection for downside risk.
Doesn't that sound like a good idea for the cattle industry too?
What would this industry say if a central agency lost tens of millions of dollars pricing "your" cattle?
How about this? Lets say that the market for cattle goes up by 50% for a couple of months. Some farms book their cattle in. Some don't because they believe the average price will rise because of the rising market so they will wait. The prices start falling back. What do the central marketers do? They close out the farmers who made a choice to wait to "protect" those farmers who booked in at the higher price to protect how the pooled price will look.
Sounds good eh?
An even better read might be Parsley's Notebook.
I invite you all to read about the great benefit our "single desk" marketer has achieved for wheat and malt barley growers over the past few years.
We have a central purchasing agency who gets to decide on the price they will sell farmers produce at and then deduct their salaries and costs and then dole out the remainder to the growers of that product.
Now we are learning of the ways they have been speculating in the futures markets without adequate protection for downside risk.
Doesn't that sound like a good idea for the cattle industry too?
What would this industry say if a central agency lost tens of millions of dollars pricing "your" cattle?
How about this? Lets say that the market for cattle goes up by 50% for a couple of months. Some farms book their cattle in. Some don't because they believe the average price will rise because of the rising market so they will wait. The prices start falling back. What do the central marketers do? They close out the farmers who made a choice to wait to "protect" those farmers who booked in at the higher price to protect how the pooled price will look.
Sounds good eh?
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