An agent (I wont out the company or the person) that I talked to today said he has booked/shipped less than 10% of what he typically has done by this time of year from end of seeding this year. And at that, he typically has 50% of total spoken for or gone out of the yard by now. That equates to 5% of average fertilizer demand accounted for as of now.
There's two sides of the coin, if none is moving at these prices, perhaps wholesalers will have to drop prices to get movement? Or, with so many guys waiting it out, that leaves a tremendous amount of demand to come forward yet, which means that will further exasperate any sort of shortages which pushes prices up?
I've made my peace with possibly bare-balling this crop. I cannot in good conscience spend this kind of money knowing that with ZERO soil moisture, this particular region doesnt stand a very good chance of pulling much of a crop, and perhaps an even worse one than the disaster that was 2021.
What are other guys seeing? Is this a Southern Alberta anomaly?
It seems natural that fertilizer layout will decrease with increased prices, but if they are even remotely close to as low as this area on a global scale, then are we possibly heading towards a man-made global food shortage? In that case, these lofty prices aren't likely going anywhere, and therefore a guy should bite the bullet and lay at least average groceries at it?
Being that we're short of alot of commodities already, if the global ag community lops off the top end potential for any fertilizer intensive crop (canola/corn/other cereals) does it further exacerbate global shortages?
There's two sides of the coin, if none is moving at these prices, perhaps wholesalers will have to drop prices to get movement? Or, with so many guys waiting it out, that leaves a tremendous amount of demand to come forward yet, which means that will further exasperate any sort of shortages which pushes prices up?
I've made my peace with possibly bare-balling this crop. I cannot in good conscience spend this kind of money knowing that with ZERO soil moisture, this particular region doesnt stand a very good chance of pulling much of a crop, and perhaps an even worse one than the disaster that was 2021.
What are other guys seeing? Is this a Southern Alberta anomaly?
It seems natural that fertilizer layout will decrease with increased prices, but if they are even remotely close to as low as this area on a global scale, then are we possibly heading towards a man-made global food shortage? In that case, these lofty prices aren't likely going anywhere, and therefore a guy should bite the bullet and lay at least average groceries at it?
Being that we're short of alot of commodities already, if the global ag community lops off the top end potential for any fertilizer intensive crop (canola/corn/other cereals) does it further exacerbate global shortages?
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