 
          6  November 4, 2014    2014 LOGAN COUNTY FARM OUTLOOK MAGAZINE   LINCOLN DAILY NEWS.com
        
        
          For a point of
        
        
          reference, the
        
        
          average cash rent
        
        
          for 2014 in Logan
        
        
          County was
        
        
          reported at $308
        
        
          per acre according
        
        
          to the National Ag
        
        
          Statistics Service.
        
        
          The budgets show
        
        
          non-land costs
        
        
          at $585 for corn
        
        
          after soybeans and
        
        
          $370 for soybeans after corn.
        
        
          The actual number from Farm Business
        
        
          Farm Management Records show
        
        
          positive income from corn in 2010
        
        
          to 2012 of $156, $292, and $240
        
        
          respectively. The red ink started in
        
        
          2013 with a small loss of $14 per acre,
        
        
          and projected losses for the 2014 are
        
        
          $156 per acre.
        
        
          The numbers may look worse as the
        
        
          estimates are still using $3.80 for the
        
        
          corn price for 2015 and $4.12 for
        
        
          2014. If you’ve
        
        
          checked the
        
        
          cash markets
        
        
          lately, the corn
        
        
          price is closer to
        
        
          $3.00.
        
        
          On the positive
        
        
          side, livestock
        
        
          producers
        
        
          are probably
        
        
          experiencing
        
        
          one of the better
        
        
          periods they have seen in quite a while.
        
        
          Prices for their products are up, and the
        
        
          feed costs are down.
        
        
          However this year or two certainly
        
        
          haven’t made up for the past 20 years
        
        
          where several livestock farms saw
        
        
          several generations of equity disappear.
        
        
          Most everyone can attest to the higher
        
        
          prices for livestock and products by
        
        
          simply going to the grocery store.
        
        
          Meat, milk, and eggs have all increased
        
        
          dramatically.
        
        
          Continued
        
        
          →