Indicators point to corrections ahead for the 2022 farm economy
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[December 20, 2021]
By Zeta Cross
(The Center Square) – The
Illinois farm economy is healthy, but the indicators show that
corrections are due.
Glen Semple, vice president/senior commercial lender of Farm Credit
Illinois, said that Farm Credit has been telling farmers to lock in
their interest rates and think twice about new debt.
“Fixed rates are a little higher, so oftentimes you have people who want
to start with a variable rate so that they can save the last one and a
half percent or two percent over a long-term fixed rate,” Semple said.
Semple has been in the farm lending business for 38 years.
“If interest rates were to go up quickly, it could be very very
detrimental to the farm economy,” he said, “If you increase interest
rates by double and multiply what their interest rates have been for the
last 3 years by 2, that is a major increase in costs for farmers.”
The cost of money is just one of a slew of other rising
costs that farmers will confront in 2022, Semple said. In the past year,
cash rents and input prices have already gone up, he said.
“It’s going to cost $100 to $150 an acre more to plant an acre of corn
in 2022 than it did in 2021,” he said. “Farmers are paying $1,300 to
$1,400 a ton for anhydrous ammonia. Seed prices are going to be up
somewhere between 5% and 10% from last year. Chemical costs are going to
be more expensive. If farmers are purchasing equipment, equipment prices
are much higher today than they were 12 months ago.”
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Supplies are not the only thing going up.
“All of the inputs into a farm operation are up considerably for
2022 versus 2021, yet the 2022 income is still undetermined,” Semple
said. “We don’t know the yield. The crop has not been planted yet.
Unless farmers are forward pricing, they don’t know what the
commodity prices are going to be for the 2022 crop.”
Semple said commodity prices are closing in on the top.
“If we have a large crop in South America and a large crop here in
the U.S., crop prices will be considerably lower a year from now
than they are right now,” Semple said. “This combination of strong
commodity prices and low interest rates. I don’t believe the
perspective of this combination is likely to stay in place much
longer.”
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