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A little note to the agrium dealers?

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    #13
    And the Hut's don't have to put a gun against anyone's head to do it either. They work together on a <b>VOLUNTARY</b> basis. It doesn't take much thinking to figure that one out either.

    Funny how you missed it though grainbeetle.

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      #14
      Grain Beetle you missed my point. It does not matter who, what, where. The thing is when, after we have been told here in north America that China and India are sucking fert out of here so we must pay more. I said a loang time ago that this was bogus, and now I know I was right

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        #15
        What a joke!! We are told world wide demand has raised fert prices, now China is selling fertilizer they supposedly need!!

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          #16
          Franny: I guess I struck a nerve..... sounds like you're a little jealous of the hutterites and their mega barns, and mega-efficient operations.

          You can probably only dream about so much stinky s--t to spread on your limited acres.
          .

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            #17
            Furrow, I somewhat agree.

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              #18
              from link in pioneer hybrids website.
              Lower urea prices spur hopes for cheaper fertilizer
              Weekly Fertilizer Review for Sept.25,2008
              With world markets in relative disarray, there are signs fertilizer prices could be softening after their run to record levels during the summer.
              Urea has seen the biggest price break so far, with Black Sea prices off more than $70 a ton in the last two weeks. Black Sea urea is quoted at around $650. Prices at the Gulf were still reported above $700 last week, but there was a report of a sale at $625 this week. December forward prices out of the Black Sea are indicated about $50 lower.
              Ammonia prices dropped about $10 a ton out of the Black Sea last week, but held steady in Tampa at around $845 a ton. December shipments are offered about $85 cheaper than current prices out of the Black Sea, where many international shipments originate.
              DAP prices also could be headed lower. A cargo out of Tunisia reportedly sold for around $970 this week, with December offers at the Gulf around $875 a ton.
              Potash appears to be the strongest of the fertilizer markets right now, with prices holding steady. That’s in part due to ongoing strikes against the Potash Corp. Product was quoted around $800 a ton in Europe this week.
              Natural gas supplies in storage rose by only 51 billion cubic feet in the latest week, less than the 62 bcf anticipated by the trade. That helped prices for natural gas, the primary feed stock for nitrogen based fertilizers, move off session lows this morning, though the market is struggling due to inability to hold above $8.

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                #19
                Why would the Chinese sell at below market values?


                just got back final settlement from FNA my payment was about $5.00 tonne off of local values when I booked
                product was excellent although I did worry quite a bit if it was going to make it before seeding.
                Average discount was apparently $13.00
                I guess they had a supplier walk away from them mid deal as well as other logistical hurdles and refund was not as high as they had hoped.
                All in all I don't think I will deal with them on fert again until they get the kinks worked out.

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                  #20
                  No, I'm not jealous of the Hut's, I actually admire their leave us alone to live our own lives attitude. I'm annoyed that other farmers such as yourself, grainbeetle, don't share the same value.

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                    #21
                    j_w, did your fertilizer arrive via rail car at a close location or did it come into your yard by truck?

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                      #22
                      I could care less about the Hut's, thats a different world. My beef is that all farmers in North America are getting screwed big time here thats it. How can someone ship fert half way aroung the globe for about 1/2 than what we pay here and it is produced here - something is drasticaly wrong. Good on the Hut's, but it should at least raise your eyebrows. We are going to sit and wait right wrong or indifferent - we have been getting fed a line of B/S for too long.

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                        #23
                        Which is why free trade and competition are so important. That's what keeps everybody honest. We need to make it even easier for fertilizer producers around the world to ship into North America.

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                          #24
                          i wonder if any quality control will be done at the unload at the port? it isn't really like the chinese to be out undercutting others with the same quality. if it seems to good to be true..... on the other hand maybe they just want to help out canadian farmers.

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