US farmer net income is forecast to rise this year for the first time since 2013, suggesting a bottom to an agriculture slump that left profit at half of the peak.
Producers of crops, livestock and dairy products may net $63.4 billion in 2017, up 3.1% from a revised $61.51 billion in 2016, the US Department of Agriculture said Wednesday in a report on its website. Much of the increase came from sales of inventory in grain bins and higher revenue from livestock and milk.
“We’re sitting in this spot where we’ve seen things levelled out,” Chad Hart, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University in Ames, said in a telephone interview. “We’re treading water. Things aren’t getting worse, but they’re not getting better. The question is: Is this just a pause before we work our way back up, or are we waiting for the next step down?”
Stability Signs
Signs of stability have returned to the farm economy. Farmland values may rise 2.3% following the 0.3% decline in 2016, USDA data showed. Cash receipts from chicken broilers and hogs were forecast to increase 15% with cattle up 5.7%, the agency said.
Two key measures of farm health, debt-to-equity and debt-to-asset ratios, will be little changed in 2017. That reflects the strong balance sheets of many farms that have had the same owner for decades, Hart said.
Younger and more highly leveraged farmers who have been waiting for better times to improve their balance sheets may need to wait longer, he said.
“If you’ve been holding on hoping for a turnaround, you’re just stuck,” he said. “But speaking more hopefully, we’ve touched the bottom.”
Hurricane Harvey, which continues to pummel the Gulf Coast, has damaged cotton and is threatening livestock production in that region. This year’s projected farm income compares with the record $123.8 billion in 2013.
A Bloomberg index of returns on eight agriculture markets has dropped 11% this year.
Improving Sentiment
An agriculture index on industry sentiment published by Purdue University and CME Group climbed in July to the highest since the survey started in October 2015.
The increase in farm income projected by the USDA reflects sentiment in the Purdue survey, David Widmar, an agricultural economist at the university in West Layfayette, Indiana, said in a telephone interview.
Income closer to $72 billion would be a sign of improving farm economy, he added.
The USDA report suggests “we are not losing ground and hit a spot to catch our breath,” Widmar said. “The big wild card is where grain prices go in 2018 to service rising debt levels. ”
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