ST. LOUIS - On his
central Illinois farm, Kyle Winklemann
has a quandary - for farmers, certainly
an enviable one.
Corn took up about
two-thirds of the 27-year-old grower's
1,800 acres last year, with soybeans
taking up much of the rest. Winklemann
made out well with both. Corn fetched
lofty prices, driven at least in part by
ethanol production reliant on it, while
soybeans are commanding prices not seen
in decades.
Come this spring, many
farmers may be beckoned back to the
beans, although Winklemann still isn't
sure what he'll do. It's a matter of
economics: With prices of soybeans
narrowing the gap with corn recently,
there's better profit potential in beans
because they're cheaper to grow than
corn.
That's not to say corn
is a laggard; the grain recently has
fetched $4 a bushel or more.
So what's a farmer to
do?
"The markets are so
volatile, no one knows what they're
going to do," Winklemann said from his
farm near Tallula, just northwest of
Springfield.
When it comes to what
to plant, "we'll make that decision when
it comes around," he said, noting that
choices may be influenced by such
factors as the lofty costs of fertilizer
and fuel.
For now, he said "I
don't really know."
A shift from corn to
beans may be inevitable, given the
context. U.S. farmers harvested a record
13.1 billion bushels of corn this fall
on nearly 93 million acres planted, in
many cases cutting their soybean acreage
for corn's sake to take advantage of
high prices fed by demand for ethanol,
the corn-based fuel additive.
Now, many observers
see U.S. farmers moving 4 million to 6
million of those corn acres back into
soybeans to take advantage of prices
that have soared for that commodity,
lately beyond $11 a bushel - a price not
seen since the early 1970s.
"Last year, there was
a clear economic signal that the market
wanted more corn acres, and farmers
responded in a big way," said Randy
Winter, an Illinois State University
professor of agricultural economics. "As
we sit here today, that message is a lot
more fuzzy."
Citing a late November
survey of some 750 growers, Farm Futures
magazine estimates that farmers are
planning to plant 88 million acres of
corn next spring, down about 5 million
from this year. Acreage of soybeans
should be about 69.5 million, up nearly
6 million acres, the magazine forecasts.
To Darrel Good, a
University of Illinois market
specialist, guessing what farmers will
do with their acres is foolhardy.
"I don't think there's
any basis for knowing that at this
point," he said. "Farmers at the margin
will make up their minds late. To make
specific forecasts right now, I think,
borders on the insane."
"We know there's a
fair amount of flexibility, right up to
the last minute," he added. "I'm just
trying to understand how people can make
acreage forecasts right now. Because
those are not set in concrete."
Other things,
including a farmer's desire for balance,
are far more certain.
Growers generally, for
example, like to rotate their acreage,
growing soybeans one year and corn on
that acreage the next to keep pests,
weeds and diseases from getting too much
of a foothold on any certain crop.
Planting consecutive crops on the same
land also can crimp yields.
But in many cases last
spring, farmers tempted by higher corn
prices went with that crop again,
dropping soybeans out of the rotation.
Now, costs of what
farmers call "inputs" - the items that
go into producing a crop - have risen
sharply, helping make the decision of
whether to bring soybeans back to the
rotation easier for many growers.
An example: Corn
craves nutrients such as nitrogen,
though costs of nitrogen fertilizer -
and anhydrous ammonia, the most common
form of that fertilizer - have
skyrocketed, making soybeans potentially
more lucrative.
A recent University of
Illinois study that took in such
expenses as seed, fertilizer, chemicals,
fuel, labor and machinery repair
projected the cost of growing corn was
$330 an acre. The cost for soybeans?
Only about $200 an acre.
Throw in the lofty
price of soybeans - lately fetching $10
to $11 a bushel compared to the $6.50 to
$7 price a year ago - and the potential
returns can be hard to ignore.
Still, there's demand
for both crops. U.S. inventories of
soybeans, adequate last year to weather
the pullback in acreage, will need to be
replenished next year. And Good says
U.S. corn exports are expected to stay
strong as Chinese exports continue
declining, helping keep corn prices
robust.
"The market has to
say, 'OK, how much corn do we need and
what price of corn does it take to get
that many acres?"' considering the input
costs, Good said. "That judgment will be
unfolding over the next several months."
Maybe not for John
Olsson.
For some time now, the
46-year-old grower near the central
Illinois town of New Berlin has split
his some 1,300 acres evenly between corn
and soybeans. And he's not expecting
that to change "by chasing prices back
and forth and wearing myself out."
"I kind of fall into
the category of boring," he said. "I
hadn't chased corn prices last year, and
I'm not chasing the soybean prices this
year. I'm keeping my rotation the same.
"My fear is being on
the wrong side of it and guessing
wrong," he shrugs, finding price
speculation not his cup of tea. "I have
a tendency just to be a little more
conservative. Call it stuck in the mud,
but I do it how it's worked."