Cycles have always been part of farming. Chris Hurt, an ag economist at Purdue University and beloved source for interviews among us farm journalists, said at his retirement in 2020: “The nature of farm income has always been short periods of booming farm income and escalations of land values followed by periods of decline where there are long periods at lower, but much more stable income.”
I looked up the last time I interviewed Hurt about ag cycles. It was in October 2017, when Hurt believed it would be about two more years before ag hit another boom era.
“Of course, any black swan event can come along and upset this analysis,” he added. Talk about a premonition! Some two-and-a-half years later we had a global pandemic, generous government supports, supply chain snafus, war in one of the world’s great breadbaskets, and a Brazilian drought, all driving a supply shortfall in nine commodities even as demand – eventually - exploded.
So, the current bull market shouldn’t be much of a surprise, right? Prices tend to cycle up and correlate with major world events; 1917 (World War I), 1947 (post WW II), 1974 (Soviet grain purchases), 2012 (ethanol, Chinese imports, drought). All were peak price years. And now we can add 2021-22 to the list of boom years. University of Illinois data shows grain farms netted over $446K in 2021.
Is the current bull market in grain over? New demand for low carbon feedstocks like soybeans and canola may boost farm incomes in the next several years. Source: University of Illinois
There’s no way to predict the start or end of cycles, but some old axioms still hold, namely, high prices cure high prices and low prices cure low prices. Another axiom? We like to make money.
New demand driver
There is a scenario unfolding that could keep this bull market hot for several years, even if high prices ‘cure’ high prices with additional world acres going into production. And that is renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel.
Demand drivers come and go; rarely do they become a permanent feature, as in ethanol. But thanks to climate warming and a global concern over carbon, California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia passed low carbon fuel standards that will require low carbon feedstocks like soybeans and canola. Numerous oil and ag stakeholders have announced plans for new soybean crush and refinery projects over the past two years. If these projects come to fruition renewable diesel capacity would grow more than six-fold to 6.5 billion gallons per year by 2030.
The question I’ve been asking economists all spring is, will renewable diesel be to oilseeds what ethanol is to corn?
Consider the ethanol playbook. Just 15 years ago we saw a major demand shift driven by the Renewable Fuel Standard. In the 10 years before RFS, U.S. farmers annually planted around 78 to 80 million corn acres; In the 10 years following RFS farmers planted, on average, 90 to 94 million acres.
That was a 14 million acre increase. What about now?
“We will increase soybean processing capacity by 25% once it’s all said and done,” says University of Minnesota grain marketing economist Ed Usset, who also pens the popular Advanced Marketing Class at FarmFutures.com. “We will need 600 million more bushels of soybeans. At 54 bu. per acre that’s 11 million more acres.”
Source: farmprogress.com
Photo Credit: GettyImages-bunyarit
Categories: Iowa, Energy