Combines nitrogen prices

R_O_M

Guest
Come on tbran! That fertilizer comes from Florida and the company might be American owned and you want compassion!! Your MIl deserves more compassion than that. [ grin!, grin! ]
 

orange

Guest
looks like those sitting on high dollar content and expecting likewise return may be smoking something! Attached is a couple of interesting documents regarding fertilizer trends: http:__www.farmfutures.com_ME2_dirmod.aspIJsid=F8F0FC025243413D80DEE92F3B36AD60andtype=genandmod=Core+Pagesandgid=0E3EACC491DF4CB083DFA55049076774 http:__www.fertilizerworks.com_html_market_TheMarket.pdf
 

jbull

Guest
In NC Okla. we are at $560_ton NH3 yesterday and they said it may go a little lower. But they don't want to contract for April delivery yet. John
 

Pengs5

Guest
I think everyone has had enough of these "executives" lately and all the trouble they've made.
 

tbran

Guest
The sad thing about it is there is becoming two Americas, 1. California-incl San Fran, the states that have all the illegals that border Mexico, Fla, then the upper East Coast and Chicago - then 2. the rest of the US.
 

Marshaltown_Farms

Guest
jbull what were you at a month or two ago. There telling us here they can't go down until the high priced stuff gets used.
 

tbran

Guest
'passion' and my MIl are two words or parts of words not to be used in the same sentence please !
 

sidekick

Guest
IG I hope you arn't setting on 08 crop.80% of mine was sold by June.Balance sold across scale at harvest when it was going down but not where it landed.I dun good!
 

IowaDan

Guest
Hey sidekick, I need you as my advisor. I only sold about 20% by June and am still sitting on the rest. Oh well, after our new President redistributes the wealth maybe you'll have to send me a check....lOl. In our Co-op news letter last week, they were trying to explain why NH3 would be higher in the spring. They're talking $1200 a ton in the spring but all of their excuses make no sense to me. Maybe we should all plant conventional corn (no traits),use no fertilizer but still try to keep the weeds under control and hope for 75 bushels per acre. Input costs would be extremely low and the price of corn would go through the roof.