U.S. Farm Income to Fall to Lowest Level in Nine Years -- Update
26 August 2015 - 6:16AM
Dow Jones News
By Jesse Newman
U.S. farm incomes will decline 36% this year to the lowest level
in nine years, the U.S. Department of Agriculture projected
Tuesday, reflecting a continued slump in crop prices and recent
weakness in the dairy and hog markets.
Net farm income will drop to $58.3 billion from $91.1 billion in
2014, marking the largest percentage decline since 1983, including
when figures are adjusted for inflation. The projected decrease
would mark the second consecutive drop after incomes reached
nominal record highs in 2013, according to the USDA.
The USDA revised lower its February estimate for a 32% decline
in farm income, mainly due to a diminished outlook for livestock
farmers. The government said their revenues could drop more than
9%, wider than its February forecast for a 5% decrease, because of
lower milk and hog prices.
The softening outlook for farm incomes comes amid a continued
downturn in the U.S. agricultural economy triggered by record corn
and soybean crops in the past few years. U.S. growers this autumn
are expected to produce bumper harvests again, which has kept
prices depressed for the two commodities.
The downdraft in the Farm Belt follows a boom during much of the
past decade as crop prices and land values soared thanks to drought
and rising demand for corn, the biggest U.S. crop by value, from
the ethanol industry and overseas buyers. Net farm income almost
doubled from 2006 through 2011.
This year, futures prices for corn already have fallen 7% since
the end of 2014, while soybean prices are down nearly 12% and
trading at the lowest levels in about six years.
"I think we have a couple of tough years coming," said Illinois
farmer David Justison, 59 years old, as he hauled grain to a river
terminal in St. Louis.
Mr. Justison said falling crop prices have significantly reduced
cash flow for many Midwestern growers, forcing them to carefully
scrutinize what once were regular purchases. "We've pretty much
stopped buying machinery," he said.
The farm-industry slump is hurting large agricultural-equipment
suppliers and seed makers. Last week, Deere & Co., the world's
largest seller of tractors and harvesting combines, said its profit
in its July-ended third quarter tumbled 40% as weak crop prices
curb farmers' appetite for new equipment.
Largely favorable weather this summer has led to expectations
that U.S. farmers will harvest big crops, though smaller than last
year's record hauls. The USDA earlier this month estimated that the
nation's corn crop will reach 13.7 billion bushels, the
third-largest crop in U.S. history. Government forecasters also
estimated the soybean crop would be the second-largest ever.
With ample grain supplies and concerns over demand for U.S.
crops weighing on prices, the USDA on Tuesday projected that annual
crop receipts would fall to $195 billion this year from $207.9
billion last year. That includes a $7.1 billion decline in cash
receipts for corn. The USDA said corn receipts have fallen 35%
since they reached record highs in 2012.
The agency forecast a more than 9% decrease in livestock
receipts, thanks largely to a decline in dairy and hog revenues
amid increasing production of both milk and pork and lower prices.
Revenue from broiler chickens is also expected to decline as export
bans linked to a highly contagious strain of bird flu increase U.S.
inventories and push prices lower, the government said.
Government forecasters expect a 29% drop in dairy receipts in
2015, as well as a 27% decline for hogs.
The USDA on Tuesday also revised lower its estimate for net farm
income in 2014, pegging last year's figure at $91.1 billion, versus
the government's February estimate of $108 billion.
Federal forecasters said after years of prosperity in the farm
sector, debt-to-asset ratios among farmers are expected to rise
this year, a sign of increasing financial strain on agricultural
operators. Still, the ratios remain at relatively low levels.
One bright spot in the Farm Belt is the USDA's prediction that
production expenses will fall this year for the first time since
2009, with decreased energy costs among the largest expected
declines. Fuel and oil costs likely will decline by almost 28%,
according to the USDA, while expenses related to the three main
crop inputs--seeds, fertilizer and pesticides--also will
decrease.
Write to Jesse Newman at jesse.newman@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 25, 2015 16:01 ET (20:01 GMT)
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