“What we’ve really seen is an increase in producers’ expectations of what they think commodities are going to do in the next few months as well as the next year. They’re more optimistic in both cases,” he told HAT. “It’s really important to note that producers were thinking that a year from now commodity prices would be stronger. Corn, wheat and soybeans, they all thought there would be higher prices for July 2018. So, just because we’ve had some ups and downs in June and July, in the third week of July producers were more optimistic about a year out from now. I think it’s a little more of a long-term shift in producer optimism about commodity prices.”
An example of producer price optimism is the survey question about whether December corn futures would go above 4.25 between now and this fall.
The July index is the second-highest since the barometer began in October of 2015. It is based on a survey of 400 U.S. agricultural producers. July exceeded recent barometer readings by 8 to 9 points, breaking out from a range of 130 to 131 during the months of April, May and June.
The barometer’s two sub-indices also were higher in July, with the Index of Current Conditions rising from 132 in June to 142 in July, and the Index of Future Expectations climbing from 131 in June to 138 in July.
The July Ag Economy Barometer report is at https://purdue.edu/agbarometer.
