Grain Prices: Explosive Moves Higher May Be On The Horizon

 | Feb 11, 2022 04:45AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Upward pressure on the agricultural sector
  • Beans are in the teens
  • Corn is trending higher
  • Wheat is sitting near $8 a bushel
  • The four factors that could lead to 2022 price explosions

Each year is a new adventure in agricultural commodities as the weather is the primary factor in the path of least resistance for prices. Droughts or floods can cause shortages in the crops that feed the world.

As we head into the 2022 crop year, factors aside from the weather underpin prices, which could cause wild volatility over the coming months. In 2021, corn, soybean and wheat prices rose to the highest levels since 2012.

Inflation at the highest level in four decades has increased farmers’ production costs. Higher fertilizer, energy, equipment, transportation, labor expenses and rising land values mean farmers must receive higher crop prices to keep pace with inflation.

Meanwhile, the global population grows by approximately 20 million each quarter, and the demand for food will be higher in 2022 than in 2021. Moreover, the shift in US energy policy away from fossil fuels in favor of alternative and renewable sources increases corn-based ethanol and soybean-based biodiesel requirements.

While the US is the world’s leading producer and exporter of corn and beans, Russia is the top wheat exporter. Tensions between the US and Russia over Ukraine could cause shortages in wheat supplies in 2022. Fasten your seatbelts for a very volatile year for agricultural products that provide nutrition and energy.

h2 Upward Pressure On The Agricultural Sector/h2

In 2021, inflation became the primary factor impacting the US economy, as the consumer and producer price indices rose to the highest levels in four decades. The central bank blamed increasing inflationary pressures on pandemic-related supply-chain bottlenecks throughout the year, calling them “transitory.” The Federal Reserve did not cite the unprecedented liquidity and government stimulus as a root cause of the economic condition.

In late 2021, the data told the Fed economists that inflation was more structural than temporary, and the central bank now plans to tighten credit. Meanwhile, agricultural producers had already been feeling inflation’s input as energy, farm equipment, fertilizers, land values and all other input prices were moving steadily higher throughout the second half of 2020 and all of 2021. Moreover, labor shortages have lifted wages for farm workers.

When all the input expenses rise, the output prices need to keep pace, or production becomes uneconomic. Over the past year, the leading crop prices have moved steadily higher and are heading into the 2022 crop year in the US and northern hemisphere appreciably higher than the highs in February 2021.

h2 Beans Are In The Teens/h2
Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

On Wednesday, Feb. 9, nearby CBOT soybean futures traded to a high of $15.92 per bushel.