US wheat farmers face bleak crop economics as grain oversupply hits
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[April 17, 2024] By
Heather Schlitz
(Reuters) - Profit is growing further out of reach for U.S. wheat
farmers and many do not expect to break even in 2024 as ample global
supply keeps prices around their lowest in nearly four years at the same
time costs including equipment and transport remain high.
The current state of the U.S. wheat market will hit winter wheat farmers
in the Great Plains hard. They may lose money despite having what looks
to be their best crop for some time after three years of drought sapped
yields and forced farmers to abandon wheat.
U.S. wheat prices have plummeted as cheap supplies from the Black Sea
and Europe replenished global stocks of the staple grain, and as
plentiful corn harvests worldwide pressure the entire commodity grains
complex. U.S. winter wheat will be the first crop to be harvested in a
year when U.S. farm income is expected to plummet, signaling tough times
ahead for rural America.
Chris Tanner, a farmer in the top wheat growing state of Kansas, said he
would need to harvest 10 bushels more per acre than last year in order
to break even.
"It's hard to describe how that makes me feel without seeming like an
angry farmer with a pitchfork," Tanner said. "It makes me feel like I'm
working in vain to raise a superior product."
A Kansas State University analysis showed Kansas farmers would need a
yield of roughly 60 bushels per acre at a price of $6.26 per bushel to
break even, well above cash prices in the state that have ranged between
$5 and $5.80 as well as July futures prices. Winter wheat is harvested
in June and July in the Great Plains.
The London-based International Grains Council forecasts a record global
grain crop in the 2024-2025 marketing season, reinforcing concerns about
a global glut.
While the size of the U.S. winter wheat crop will become clearer in
coming weeks, particularly during an annual wheat tour in May, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture said on Monday that 55% of the crop is in
good-to-excellent condition, the highest for this time of year since
2020.
Scott Born, a wheat farmer near Dallas, Texas, said he needs a price of
at least $6 per bushel of wheat to break even, a price that is also
above the current cash price in his region.
The costs to transport and produce American wheat remain high compared
with Black Sea and European wheat, raising existential concerns about
the long-term competitiveness of U.S. exports.
The U.S. is the world's No. 5 wheat exporter, having lost market share
to top exporter Russia an other producers in recent years.
The global market is so competitive that American companies at times
have bought European wheat to take advantage of low prices. The USDA
estimates wheat imports in the current marketing year at 18 million
bushels, the highest in a decade.
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A combine harvests wheat in Corn, Oklahoma, U.S., June 12, 2019.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
FEWER WHEAT FARMS
USDA expects farmers to reduce the number of wheat acres planted for
the 2024 growing season, counting both the winter and spring crops,
by more than 4% compared with 2023. The number of U.S. farms growing
wheat has sunk by over 40% in the last two decades as farmers
favored other crops.
While wheat prices have collapsed, farmers said costs for farm
equipment, repairs and labor have soared, leaving them with little
money in their pocket after harvest. Farmers said crop insurance
policies will allow them to recoup only a portion of their financial
losses and payouts are not enough to make them whole.
USDA expects 2024 U.S. farm income will fall by nearly $40 billion
from a year earlier in nominal terms after also decreasing in 2023
as direct government payments shrink, production costs surge and
growing supplies of grains and oilseeds send crop prices plunging to
multi-year lows.
"Somewhere in there, you've got to make a living," Born said. "If
there's anything left, I might have something to live on."
Growers have cut back on purchases and equipment repairs to stay
afloat, while continuing to plant wheat as a crucial part of crop
rotation in spite of low prices.
USDA expects the number of acres planted with winter wheat, which
accounts for about two-thirds of U.S. production, to have declined
7% from 2023 to 2024. USDA forecasts spring wheat acres to expand by
1%, however.
Wheat can act as a cover crop and leave behind rich soil where
farmers cam plant crops that are less likely to put them in the red.
"Farmers don't have a choice but to plant wheat," Ryan Ellis, a
North Dakota wheat farmer, said.
Seeds for more profitable crops, such as lentils and peas, can be
hard to come by and can only be sown in certain areas.
"Rotation dictates a lot of wheat acres. You feel like you're being
forced into seeding it, but what else will you do?" Ellis said.
(Reporting by Heather Schlitz; Additional reporting by Julie
Ingwersen; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Marguerita Choy)
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