ECON 337: Agricultural Marketing Chad Hart Assistant Professor [email protected] 515-294-9911 Econ 337, Spring 2012 Chad Hart Assistant Professor [email protected] 515-294-9911 Heady 468E Econ 337, Spring 2012

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Transcript ECON 337: Agricultural Marketing Chad Hart Assistant Professor [email protected] 515-294-9911 Econ 337, Spring 2012 Chad Hart Assistant Professor [email protected] 515-294-9911 Heady 468E Econ 337, Spring 2012

ECON 337:
Agricultural Marketing
Chad Hart
Assistant Professor
[email protected]
515-294-9911
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Chad Hart
Assistant Professor
[email protected]
515-294-9911
Heady 468E
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Class Time:
TR 9:30-10:20am
East 119
Lab Time:
T 2:10-4:00pm
Location announced in class
(Usually Heady 68)
Office Hours:
By appointment
Class web site:
http://www.econ.iastate.edu/~chart/Classes/econ337/Spring2012/
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Guidelines and rules:
 No cell phone calls or texting in class or lab
 Lab attendance is required, difficult to reschedule
 Class attendance is recommended
Course reading and resource materials will be
available on-line
Grading:
 Two exams
 Three quizzes
 Homework assignments
 Marketing plan project and report
Econ 337, Spring 2012
40%
15%
15%
30%
Course objectives:
 Understand the use of futures, options, and other
tools in marketing and risk management decisions
 Understand the use of cash sales and contracts
and the role of basis, storage, and transportation in
determining prices
 Know the various sources of agricultural data
information and the roles these data play within the
commodity markets
 Understand the forces that shape commodity
markets and learn about market/price forecasting
 Design an integrated production and marketing
plan for farms and agribusiness
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Marketing
A series of events and services to create, modify,
and transport a product from initial creation to
consumption
Possible steps:
Planning
Production
Inspection
Transport
Storage
Processing
Sale
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Market players:
Producers
Elevators
Processors
Transport companies
Banks/Insurance companies
Traders
Feeders
Market Functions
Location
Where do you want it?
Time
When do you want it?
Form
How do you want it?
Price discovery
What will you pay for it?
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Cash Markets
A market where physical commodities are traded
Local elevators
Ethanol plants & soybean crushers
River terminals
Feeders/feed mills
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Futures Markets
A market where contracts for physical commodities are
traded, the contracts set the terms of quantity, quality,
and delivery
Chicago: Corn, soybeans, cattle, hogs
Along with wheat (soft red), oats, rice
Kansas City: Wheat (hard red winter)
Minneapolis: Wheat (hard red spring)
Tokyo: Corn, soybeans, coffee, sugar
Has a market for Non-GMO soybeans
Other markets in Argentina, Brazil, China, and Europe
Econ 337, Spring 2012
The Cash and Futures Markets Are
Related
Basis = Cash price – Futures price
Rearranging terms:
Cash price = Futures price + Basis
So national (and international) events can
affect local prices
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Market Activities
Pricing the commodity
Establishing contracts
Merchandising the commodity among uses
Transporting the products
Storing the products
Managing and controlling the products
Managing production and price risks
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Price Determination and Discovery
Price Determination
– is the broad forces of supply and demand
establishing a market clearing price for a
commodity.
Price Discovery
– is the process by which buyers and sellers
arrive at a specific price for a given lot of
produce at a given location for a specific
time period.
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Price Determination and Price Discovery
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Econ 337, Spring 2012
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Futures Markets
Organized and centralized market
Today’s price for products to be delivered
in the future
A mechanism of trading promises of future
commodity deliveries among traders
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Futures and Options
Market tools to help manage (share) price
risks
Mechanisms to establish commodity
trades among participants at a future time
Available from commodity exchanges /
futures markets
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Agricultural Futures Markets
Has some unique features due to the nature of agricultural
businesses
Supply comes online a few times during the year
So at harvest, supply spikes, then diminishes until the
next harvest
Production decisions are based price forecasts
Planting decisions can be made a full year (or more)
before the crop price is realized
Users provide year-round demand
Livestock feeding, biofuel production, food demand
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Futures Market Exchanges
Competitive markets
Open out-cry and electronic trading
Centralized pricing
Buyers and sellers are both in the market
Relevant information is conveyed through the bids
and offers for the trades
Bid = the price at which a trader would buy the
commodity
Offer = the price at which a trader would sell the
commodity
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Futures Market Exchanges
Modern futures market began long ago
1848 -- Chicago Board of Trade
1898 -- Chicago Mercantile Exchange
2007 -- CME Group merged CBOT and CME
Highly regulated markets
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC)
Econ 337, Spring 2012
The View from the Corn Pit
Econ 337, Spring 2012
Source: M. Spencer Green, AP Photo