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    #31
    I still think the decline in prices are because of politics more than anything, slamming the door "COMPLETELY" closed to imports was politically motivated, nothing else.

    There may less Chinese demand but I doubt there is none!

    Nobody in China cooks with canola oil anymore?

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      #32
      Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
      I still think the decline in prices are because of politics more than anything, slamming the door "COMPLETELY" closed to imports was politically motivated, nothing else.

      There may less Chinese demand but I doubt there is none!

      Nobody in China cooks with canola oil anymore?
      farma they have been stockpiling it so who knows what their real demand even is. Who can tell in a closed society like that. markets are about information on supply and demand and we cant even gauge what theirs really is. That would be a bad signal for any investor. Maybe they expect a price crash to come in as an even bigger buyer in a yrs time at a few bucks less. We have no idea.

      What happened to the TPP and CEP which were going to take up some of our production?

      Even if we give that woman back and allow Huewai in here that's no guarantee they will be buyers. They can halt canola purchases in a heartbeat but once that 5G tech is imbedded in our communications backbone, we will be wed to it forever. Sometimes with china the most obvious thing is not really what it is. Maybe taking western imports is just a pretense to get their products in here.
      Last edited by jazz; Mar 30, 2019, 12:42.

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        #33
        Originally posted by wd9 View Post
        How does what we think the price should be actually allow us to set the price? Why not then just set the price to 15$ a bushel? Don't you think that maybe that is the delusional part?
        What is delusional is watching Evraz get 40 million and Bourgault using their seconds to make drills out of at 750k plus for a drill.

        All subsidized...meanwhile farmers get a price for their product in Canada based off a subsidized market in the US...

        Its all idiotic and guys that say the markets work in Canada are truly ****ed in the head because the US farmer enjoyed a 1.65USD (2.20cdn) on their soybeans from the government....

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          #34
          Originally posted by jazz View Post
          Guys WD is right, although a little coarse in his opinion. I bet dollars to donuts china isn't coming back to thus market like they have been. The numbers don't support it from their hog problems to slowing economy to potentially new exclusive deal with trump. Add in the threat mentioned from much lower 3rd world production costs and our system will need a radical overhaul. Our COP has to come down. There is no way to out yield or out grocery this problem or spread costs over a larger land base.
          I agree
          Thats the point i was trying to make
          The party is over
          There is nowhere to tighten anymore except inputs. Which will cut production which will really hurt the sector living off farmers

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            #35
            Originally posted by bucket View Post
            What is delusional is watching Evraz get 40 million and Bourgault using their seconds to make drills out of at 750k plus for a drill.

            All subsidized...meanwhile farmers get a price for their product in Canada based off a subsidized market in the US...

            Its all idiotic and guys that say the markets work in Canada are truly ****ed in the head because the US farmer enjoyed a 1.65USD (2.20cdn) on their soybeans from the government....
            I completely agree, its not fair. But it is our mess we have to run a business in. Sorry for being coarse, but holy shit, its time to start facing reality and come up with solutions for your own operation on how to remain viable. Hint, it isn't by buying that 750k drill.

            That 1.65 gets absorbed by everyone else and the US farmer only ends up with higher risk, higher rents, higher machine cost, higher inputs higher.....
            Last edited by wd9; Mar 30, 2019, 13:57.

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              #36
              Originally posted by wd9 View Post
              I completely agree, its not fair. But it is our mess we have to run a business in. Sorry for being coarse, but holy shit, its time to start facing reality and come up with solutions for your own operation on how to remain viable. Hint, it isn't by buying that 750k drill.
              Sure I understand what you are saying and I don't own an expensive drill or new equipment...but when inputs are outrageous how does one go forward....

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                #37
                Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                Local Pioneer Richardson, Oct 30 closing price on nearest month was 10.50. Yesterday posted closing price was $10.19, buyer said that offers 10.25 or higher than that were being picked up during the day. Hardly the catastrophe everyone is making it out to be.
                I would say that at today's expense to operate any reasonable grain operation with canola in your rotation, 10.19 is definitely a catastrophe. Just the risk alone, is worth more than that!

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by wd9 View Post
                  I completely agree, its not fair. But it is our mess we have to run a business in. Sorry for being coarse, but holy shit, its time to start facing reality and come up with solutions for your own operation on how to remain viable. Hint, it isn't by buying that 750k drill.

                  That 1.65 gets absorbed by everyone else and the US farmer only ends up with higher risk, higher rents, higher machine cost, higher inputs higher.....
                  And on top of all that, I still haven't figured out how obscuring the market signals which were trying to discourage production, by paying farmers per bushel produced, which will encourage more production, is going to solve any long term problem of excess production weighing on prices.

                  Isn't that just making the problem bigger further down the road?

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                    #39
                    Originally posted by wd9 View Post
                    Hint, it isn't by buying that 750k drill.

                    Nope its going to be true diversification, lower inputs through more cover crops, hay, feed grains, possibly intercropping or even idling land and farmers owning something other than just ag. We are way too concentrated in a single asset class. People with spare money shouldn't just get more iron and dirt everytime, they should buy something in a different asset class all together.

                    I sold a quarter this spring and bought into the stock market. 5% dividend is just about what I would make trying to grow canola off that quarter. Was time to unload it, now I have income from a different source.

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                      #40
                      Originally posted by bucket View Post
                      Sure I understand what you are saying and I don't own an expensive drill or new equipment...but when inputs are outrageous how does one go forward....
                      Ask Hobbyfarmer and Austranada. Eliminating inputs seems to be working.

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