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Straight Up Gouging
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Whole system is rigged. People talk about this company or that company that increase their prices but it’s way up higher on the food chain that. U gotta look to see who and why things are the way they are. It goes all the way to our economical and financial systems. Not just Ag.
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No different than other years, the decrease just came off from a higher starting point.
Supply and demand, that's why 12 out of 13 years fertilizer prices were cheaper in the fall.
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It is a normal seasonal thing that fertilizer prices ease starting in late May. In the past, fertilizer picked up after the May long was usually lower than fertilizer bought earlier in the season, often times helping make the average price paid in spring quite competitive with storing fertilizer bought in fall. The fertilizer 'shortage' was really over hyped this year.
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Guest
yep ,complete fu kin joke
did anyone have any trouble getting any ?????
they just suckered a bunch of farmers into paying and storing it for them and then same farmers telling everyone how smart they were ?
fu kin amazing
liberty , glyphos will be the same
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Lots of seed still in the sheds me and most of my neighbors just starting . See 1/2 tons with barrels of liberty in the back going down the hi-way I guess they just got back from China !! Another 1/2 inch rain last night Oh- boy.
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Entirely right Jazz, this isn’t inflation, it’s gouging.
Many assets will collapse or have begun to collapse. It really doesn’t matter what central bankers do, gouging will solve itself. Demand destruction has already begun,â€.As Elon Musk just stated; We will see a rash of bankruptcies. Central banks have propped up many companies that shouldn’t exist. He’s right . . . . Words not quite right, but get the idea.
The recession markets have already entered may be far deeper than either 2000 or 2008. Commodities will also be impacted, even crude oil. Crude has a long ways down, when this ship cracks.
Talk that inflation is here to say just me makes me chuckle . . . .
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Just waiting for the chem reps to be out telling us we must spray fungicides 4-6 times , ohhh and due to “shortages†it’s triple over last year “ Gotta protect that $20 canola†…. Lol .
With no subsoil and missing this last system, one 10-14 day stretch of hot weather without rain and not fungicide on earth will pay
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Originally posted by errolanderson View PostEntirely right Jazz, this isn’t inflation, it’s gouging.
Many assets will collapse or have begun to collapse. It really doesn’t matter what central bankers do, gouging will solve itself. Demand destruction has already begun,â€.As Elon Musk just stated; We will see a rash of bankruptcies. Central banks have propped up many companies that shouldn’t exist. He’s right . . . . Words not quite right, but get the idea.
The recession markets have already entered may be far deeper than either 2000 or 2008. Commodities will also be impacted, even crude oil. Crude has a long ways down, when this ship cracks.
Talk that inflation is here to say just me makes me chuckle . . . .
And do we really want someone telling us the maximum we can sell our crops for? Because if you feel fertilizer prices should be controlled how can you argue against no controls of food prices right back to farm gate?
And it is really easy to cry gouging, but there is a major war happening where components of many products are mined, found. China is still locked down from covid and production and processing of materials/products/parts we need is stalled. There are shipping/port constraints around the world due to many issues. Supply lines are broken. And everyone of these issues add costs to the system.
High prices will cure high prices. New supply'suppliers are found. Replacement products are developed. That is how capitalism works. Or is capitalism/freemarket no longer supported by agriville.
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I do not personally know a single farmer who:
1) put down exactly the same pre-seed cocktail as they usually do. Lots of reduced rates, and substituted chemistries.
2) put down as much fertilizer as they did last year. Lots put down the same $/ac as they normally would have, some were even well below their traditional $/ac spend.
Things could certainly be different in higher production areas, but I have no doubt that the market did exactly what the higher prices were intending to do...
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Originally posted by helmsdale View PostI do not personally know a single farmer who:
1) put down exactly the same pre-seed cocktail as they usually do. Lots of reduced rates, and substituted chemistries.
2) put down as much fertilizer as they did last year. Lots put down the same $/ac as they normally would have, some were even well below their traditional $/ac spend.
Things could certainly be different in higher production areas, but I have no doubt that the market did exactly what the higher prices were intending to do...
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