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16

Oct. 27, 2016

2016 Logan County Fall Farm Outlook Magazine

Lincoln Daily News

I

n the past few years, high corn yields that have

resulted in lower commodity and lower farm

profits have also had an affect on equipment

sales around the U.S. and in central Illinois.

This trend has been occurring for a couple of years.

In an October 2015 Illinois Farmer Today article

discussing the connection between lower corn

prices and equipment sales, Nat Williams said,

“Tighter profit margins largely due to falling grain

prices have slowed sales of tractors, combines, and

other high-dollar pieces.”

In the same article, vice president of industry

relations with the North American Equipment

Dealers Association, Joe Dyke said, “There is no

question that new equipment sales have dropped

off considerably, and probably will until the farm

economy picks up.”

Food commodities trader Olam International Ltd.

believes low grain prices will continue in 2017.

Their chief executive officer, Sunny Verghese

says, “Wheat prices have fallen to their lowest in

10 years, while corn is at levels last seen during the

global financial crisis, as farmers in key growing

regions, including the U.S. and Russia, harvest

bumper crops. Low grain prices have been a boon

for consumers and companies such as Nestle

SA and Kellogg Co. but are hurting farmers and

agribusiness including Deere & Co., the world’s

largest manufacturer of tractors and combines.”

A September 2016 Tractor and Combine Analysis

from the Farm Equipment Manufacturers

Association’s Charlie Glass likewise predicts lower

equipment sales will continue. Glass says, “Net

farm income for 2016 is expected to be around

$94 billion and that is more than a 30% decline

from the record level seen in 2013. Even when the

$7 billion in insurance payments are added to the

projected net farm income for 2016, it is still 25%

lower than the 2013 high point. As we have noted

repeatedly, net farm income is a major indicator of

the next year’s equipment sales and this does not

bode well for an increase in unit sales for 2017. “

Data from the Association of Equipment

Manufacturers shows a decline in sales of larger

tractors and combines in 2016.

The “United States Ag Tractor and Combine

Report” for September 2016 from the Association

of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) shows sales

in the US of four wheel drive tractors used by

cropping farmers are down by 32.4 percent since

this time last year.

Combine sales have seen a similar, though smaller,

decrease. AEM says, “Combine sales in the US

dropped by 24.2 percent between 2015 and 2016.”

How commodity prices and profits

are affecting equipment sales

By

Angela Reiners

Continued ►