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    #31
    Sorry about the double pure speculation. It was not meant for extra emphasis.

    Comment


      #32
      Ward . . . to run any business requires
      price speculation and price risk
      management. Building a minimum floor
      price contract on your own without
      government program involvement or
      interference is a very strong marketing
      skill. Growers that have this marketing
      ability should be commended. What Tom is
      saying is a grower can lock his price
      downside while taking advantage of any
      price upside. What business person would
      not want to do this? This is not 'wild
      ass' speculation, this is a smart
      business move and a prudent business
      strategy.

      Errol

      Comment


        #33
        Ward,

        I agree with you that if your are generally long you are speculating.

        Where that agreement ends is if you have your down side risk eliminated, therefore I can get no less than X but I have upside opportunity that is Risk management with a lottery ticket in my books, not speculation. Agree with Errol and Tom on this.

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          #34
          If you've fixed your price with a delivery
          contract, as in Tom's example, there is no
          downside price risk. All you've done is buy a
          lottery ticket.

          Comment


            #35
            Errol, I don't disagree with you. Both
            strategies have been used to make many folks
            money. As I said in my original post, make
            sure you know what is hedging and what is
            speculation.

            Comment


              #36
              I agree with you Ward that there are alot of farm folks that confuse speculation and hedging.

              Comment


                #37
                Purchasing a call option to replace a
                cash grain sale is no lottery ticket.

                This is a farm business decision to take
                advantage of a market rise should it
                occur. The grower has already guarded
                his or her price downside. This is basic
                marketing and a very strong pricing
                management tool especially though
                weather markets.

                Errol

                Comment


                  #38
                  Dear Ward,

                  Perhaps you missed to issue of selling grain that is not actual inventory in a bin... but is "unharvested production" that is expected to be sold after it IS harvested. Buying options back or going back long futures on havested production that was alredy sold once...is very different...

                  Many grain growers in 2002 had huge losses by selling 3 times the actual production they ended up harvesting...

                  Then these growers needed to buy back grain to fill these contracts at prices much higher than what they had hedged at... hence the need to protect against upside movement till the grain is secure in the bin.

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