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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]





Tight Credit for Farmers Leads to Smaller Crops, Higher Prices and More Hunger

CEO Blogger (October 28th, 2008) Writes:

Tighter credit for farmers could worsen a global food crisis as smaller crop sizes cause prices to soar. Many farmers have traditionally bought pre-season supplies such as seeds and fertilizer on credit and then paid off the debt with the proceeds from the year’s harvest. But with a growing number of farmers unable to obtain the credit they need, crop yields will suffer.

Global wheat production will likely be 4.4% less next year, Dan Basse, president of AgResource Co. in Chicago, told Bloomberg News. Basse believes the world’s corn and soybean crops will also see declines.

The credit situation is worrying even the biggest and best farmers,” Brian Willot, a former University of Missouri commodity analyst who now grows soybeans in Brazil, told Bloomberg. “For the financially weak, credit has dried up completely. For the strong, credit has been delayed and interest rates are

...

Tight Credit for Farmers Leads to Smaller Crops, Higher Prices and More Hunger

Money Morning (October 28th, 2008) Writes:
Tighter credit for farmers could worsen a global food crisis as smaller crop sizes cause prices to soar. Many farmers have traditionally bought pre-season supplies such as seeds and fertilizer on credit and then paid off the debt with the proceeds from the year’s harvest. But with a growing number of farmers unable to obtain the credit they need, crop yields will suffer. Global wheat production will likely be 4.4% less next year, Dan Basse, president of AgResource Co. in Chicago, told Bloomberg News. Basse believes the world’s corn and soybean crops will also see declines. “The credit situation is worrying even the biggest and best farmers,” Brian Willot, a former University of Missouri commodity analyst who now grows soybeans in Brazil, told Bloomberg. “For the financially weak, credit has dried up completely. For the strong, credit has been delayed and ...

Bailouts for commodity speculators

James Hamilton (October 20th, 2008) Writes:

If automakers are lining up at the trough, why not Big Agra?

Scott Irwin alerts me to this story from DomesticFuel.com:

Ethanol plants that have been hurt by dramatic fluctuations in commodity prices this year could be eligible for assistance from the US Department of Agriculture.

Secretary of Agriculture Ed Schafer told reporters after an address to the World Food Prize breakfast in Des Moines Friday that "some plants are under pressure because they've been speculating on corn."

Schafer said there are USDA programs that could, for example, help the companies refinance and reduce their interest rates on operating expenses such as corn purchases. USDA's Rural Development Program can lend up to $25 million to refinance or loan guarantees. "We have several ways we can help with dollars in rural areas," Schafer said.

Some ethanol companies, most notably VeraSun, speculated on corn prices during the summer and locked in prices when

...

Scorching Hot Food Inflation

Sean Brodrick (June 5th, 2008) Writes:
Scorching Hot Food Inflation Today, we are seeing the US dollar go up and gold go down. That's interesting, considering that inflation is nowhere near tamed.U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer: " We are anticipating this year an over 40 percent increase in food price inflation globally, 43 percent approximately." Schafer added: "Of that we can identify two to three percent of that price increase that is driven by biofuels."So Mr. Schafer says something to scare the pants off us -- 43% food inflation. The same number was cited by Edward Lazar, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, in his testimony to the Senate last month. Most people seem to have missed that.At the same time, Schaefer's 2% to 3% figure for biofuel-caused inflation sounds bogus. So what can we believe?If you believe the IMF, the ...

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