The Corn Cliff: Buy Now

 | Jan 10, 2013 11:15AM ET

Politicians in Washington were able to avoid going off the fiscal cliff at the last moment. But in 2013, farmers are staring at a new cliff of their own. Expectations for record corn production in South America and the U.S. in 2013 may send grain prices -- and farmers -- off a cliff. The fiscal cliff had negative long-term implications, but the good news is, the corn cliff may be temporary and result in a race back to the top for prices.

Near-Record Highs
Corn prices are near record highs and U.S. corn supplies are the lowest since 1995. If the U.S. stopped producing corn, we would run out in a quick 21 days. In order to capitalize on the high corn prices, U.S. farmers are expected to plant 99 million acres of corn in 2013, according to Informa Economics. This is the highest acreage since the 1930s and a 12% increase over 2010.