Fertilizer demand looks to fall as North American farmers plant less in reaction to higher prices

Fertilizer demand looks to fall as North American farmers plant less in reaction to higher prices

Logic says that demand for fertilizer should be soaring as North American farmers look to increase production at a time when grain prices are near record highs thanks to the severe reduction in exports from the Ukraine and Russia. Logic, however, looks to be wrong. An article in the Financial Times on June 4 reports that demand for fertilizer is falling in response to record prices–for fertilizer. Farmers faced with higher costs for everything from fertilizer to diesel fuel are feeling themselves squeezed in spite of higher grain prices. So they’re buying less fertilizer and shifting away from crops such as corn that require heavy fertilizer use and toward crops such as soybeans, that require less fertilizer. U.S. farmers, the Financial Times reports, have told the U.S. Department of Agriculture that they intend to plant 4% fewer acres with corn n this spring and boost the number of acres dedicated to soybeans.

Please watch my new YouTube video: You should own more commodities

Please watch my new YouTube video: You should own more commodities

I’m starting up my videos on JubakAM.com again–this time using YouTube as a platform. My one-hundredth-and eighth YouTube video “You should own more commodities” went up today. We all know that oil and gas prices will rise even more as a result of the invasion and you’ve probably added oil and natural gas stocks to your portfolio. I recommended that you do that back in January. But did you know that aluminum prices will soar too? Same with zinc. And wheat. The list goes on. There are a few individual stocks – like LNG and AA – I recommend to get yourself on top of this situation, but I also recommend looking at commodity ETNs like DJP which include agriculture as well as energy stocks in one basket.