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Holy Cow! Input Capital averages $10.89/bu on Canola! Cant afford not to use them!

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    Holy Cow! Input Capital averages $10.89/bu on Canola! Cant afford not to use them!

    I personally like how they picked an off the combine price on August 15th to compare to their average throughout the year. Insulting to their potential clients to release a statement like this. $10.89 is not a good average when $12 was available in most of Sask for a good part of the year. But they are the experts!



    INPUT CAPITAL MARKETING STREAMS TO PUT $1,500 MORE PER SEMI-LOAD IN FARMERS' POCKETS THIS YEAR

    REGINA, Aug. 16, 2018 /CNW/ - Input Capital Corp. ("Input" or the "Company") (TSXV: INP) (US: INPCF) is pleased to announce the Declared Regional Price ("DRP") for marketing stream contracts for the 2018 crop season. The DRP for 2018 canola sales was set yesterday at $494.80 per MT, FOB Farm.


    The DRP is the final reference price in the calculation of how much farmers receive for the canola they have contracted to sell via Input's marketing stream program. For crop grown in 2018, this means that marketing stream clients will receive a final price of $480.06 per MT ($10.89 per bushel), with Input organizing and paying for trucks to pick up the canola from the farmer's farmyard.

    By comparison, the elevator price at Balgonie, Saskatchewan, at the close of business yesterday, was $452.52 per MT (or $10.26 per bushel). To get that price, the farmer would be required to complete the trucking at his/her own time and expense.

    This means that for every 42 MT semi-truck load of canola grown in 2018 and sold via Input's marketing stream program, producers will put an extra $1,576.68 in their pocket, plus save themselves the time and effort required to drive the truck to the elevator themselves, and sit in line to complete the delivery.

    Gord Nystuen, VP of Market Development at Input Capital commented: "The Input Capital marketing stream program offers excellent value to producers, helping them get a better price via Input than they often get on their own, with the added benefit that Input's team of canola marketing professionals manage all of the logistics, marketing, contracting, and hedging required to run the program successfully."

    Input has 274 canola marketing stream clients across western Canada and invites canola farmers who are interested in a simple and straight-forward canola marketing program that helps them make more money to contact their local Input Capital marketing stream representative for more information about this program. A listing of Input reps can be found on the Input website at HTTP://INPUTCAPITAL.COM/OUR-TEAM/.

    #2
    Originally posted by farmboy44 View Post
    I personally like how they picked an off the combine price on August 15th to compare to their average throughout the year. Insulting to their potential clients to release a statement like this. $10.89 is not a good average when $12 was available in most of Sask for a good part of the year. But they are the experts!



    INPUT CAPITAL MARKETING STREAMS TO PUT $1,500 MORE PER SEMI-LOAD IN FARMERS' POCKETS THIS YEAR

    REGINA, Aug. 16, 2018 /CNW/ - Input Capital Corp. ("Input" or the "Company") (TSXV: INP) (US: INPCF) is pleased to announce the Declared Regional Price ("DRP") for marketing stream contracts for the 2018 crop season. The DRP for 2018 canola sales was set yesterday at $494.80 per MT, FOB Farm.


    The DRP is the final reference price in the calculation of how much farmers receive for the canola they have contracted to sell via Input's marketing stream program. For crop grown in 2018, this means that marketing stream clients will receive a final price of $480.06 per MT ($10.89 per bushel), with Input organizing and paying for trucks to pick up the canola from the farmer's farmyard.

    By comparison, the elevator price at Balgonie, Saskatchewan, at the close of business yesterday, was $452.52 per MT (or $10.26 per bushel). To get that price, the farmer would be required to complete the trucking at his/her own time and expense.

    This means that for every 42 MT semi-truck load of canola grown in 2018 and sold via Input's marketing stream program, producers will put an extra $1,576.68 in their pocket, plus save themselves the time and effort required to drive the truck to the elevator themselves, and sit in line to complete the delivery.

    Gord Nystuen, VP of Market Development at Input Capital commented: "The Input Capital marketing stream program offers excellent value to producers, helping them get a better price via Input than they often get on their own, with the added benefit that Input's team of canola marketing professionals manage all of the logistics, marketing, contracting, and hedging required to run the program successfully."

    Input has 274 canola marketing stream clients across western Canada and invites canola farmers who are interested in a simple and straight-forward canola marketing program that helps them make more money to contact their local Input Capital marketing stream representative for more information about this program. A listing of Input reps can be found on the Input website at HTTP://INPUTCAPITAL.COM/OUR-TEAM/.
    Reminds me of CWB pricing except it appears private enterprise does a much better minimizing and justifying their payments to farmers. Plus they have the farmer's land as security too.

    Comment


      #3
      wow what horseshit !
      hey INPUT CAPITAL, we averaged $11.55 last year ?
      sold one load last fall for $10.90 , lowest price for the year
      sold lots this spring and early summer for $12 for a long time
      bunge price for today is $11.51?
      and I consider us really poor marketers
      please compare your AVERAGE price for the year to the actual average for the year in the area , not the "happy hour combine price" ???
      do people actually believe this stuff you are printing ???
      Last edited by caseih; Aug 16, 2018, 13:16.

      Comment


        #4
        It is a f$&kjng joke we averaged way higher and he 12s did help thanks to holding and yea the lowest was what we got last fall. Again the crop wasn’t as big and they needed canola.

        It’s a game Viagra Capital is a last chance club.

        Comment


          #5
          DMLfarmer....I thought the same thing as I was reading it.

          Hey, you gotta be a special kind of crook to get behind and work for that scam.

          I wonder how many of those weasels pray on Sunday and prey the rest of the week.

          Dangerous when you believe your own bullshit...or maybe that's a con artisit's trait...

          I would salvage my equity and pride before I risked it with these special kind of people!

          Comment


            #6
            Input Captial should be announcing how many farmers’ land titles they put in their pocket last year. That is the real end game.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by hobbyfrmr View Post
              Input Captial should be announcing how many farmers’ land titles they put in their pocket last year. That is the real end game.
              But in the meantime will skim cream.

              Comment


                #8
                Yup gona work real good on $100plus rent at 30 bu/ac Pencil ✏️ that out lol ....
                Let alone canola at 1/3 share ... red ink anyone??
                The door is getting slammed shut

                Comment


                  #9
                  Karma ....what goes around, comes around .... most here get it

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                    Karma ....what goes around, comes around .... most here get it
                    I wonder if when anyone is lying on their death bed they wished they devised or worked for a canola "scheming" contract company....immorality has no limits to those without conscience. When money is your God you would rather die a rich man than with a clear conscience.

                    Everyone in the Ag Industry needs to take heed when they rob someone of what is rightfully someone else's....grain grade or value, fuel fert chem seed over priced values.

                    Now to get on my moral high-horse and ride off into the sunset...

                    Comment


                      #11
                      The more I think about this group the more I believe Sask Farmers use them.

                      look around a guy who a few years ago couldn't find 8 quarters to buy a cup of coffee. Now is renting half the country and seeding Canola and Lentils or Canola and Wheat.

                      How many knows of guys in their area.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View Post
                        The more I think about this group the more I believe Sask Farmers use them.

                        look around a guy who a few years ago couldn't find 8 quarters to buy a cup of coffee. Now is renting half the country and seeding Canola and Lentils or Canola and Wheat.

                        How many knows of guys in their area.
                        This is very easy to find out if you want. Setup an ISC account and for $7 (prob fees are higher now) do PPSA search.

                        I agree fully that some of these operations that are buying up land at high prices, buying complete lines of equipment every year and then auctioning off at Ritchie’s, have contracts with them.

                        For some its a knick in the juggler, for others, its a large bleeding wound and a poorer crop like this won’t be good

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I still have all my old accounts in service.

                          Key stroke tells all.

                          Just saying why is my question.


                          Just to pretend your a BTO

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                            I wonder if when anyone is lying on their death bed they wished they devised or worked for a canola "scheming" contract company....immorality has no limits to those without conscience. When money is your God you would rather die a rich man than with a clear conscience.

                            Everyone in the Ag Industry needs to take heed when they rob someone of what is rightfully someone else's....grain grade or value, fuel fert chem seed over priced values.

                            Now to get on my moral high-horse and ride off into the sunset...
                            Rob??? I disagree. What is happening in ag is pure capitalism and the market economy. Buyers pay no more than what sellers are willing to sell for and suppliers are pricing everything from fuel to parts to seed at what they can sell for. Unfortunately, individual farmers, even the largest BTOs, have always been too small to have any market power in ag. And our power is being further diminished by the rapid consolidation of buyers, traders, and suppliers within what is now a global marketplace. Again, another outcome of unchecked capitalism. A proven strategy in capitalism is to buyout your competitor to gain market share thereby giving more market power. The void that is left is naturally filled by "advisers" "consultants" and "schemers" like IC looking to make their own bucks on.

                            And where do you draw the line between robbery and profiting. Is a retiring farmer selling his land to a young person at a price which is double or triple the productive value and which will never pay for itself robbing the young person of his quest to be a farmer, or is it a case that the retiring farmer is simply profiting from the market. Makes your argument real tough to defend when you are the one benefitting from a market economy.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              If I want/need what they have and they set the price.....what choice do I have? Take it or leave it. Sadly those things never seem correct or adjust down much.

                              What I pay for land is my choice...take it or leave it. It may just correct yet.

                              Land, machinery, inputs are out of control....

                              Comment

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