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Smithfield CEO: Higher Food Prices Are Here To Stay
TWS ^ | Phoenix Capital Research

Posted on 05/04/2011 6:47:32 PM PDT by blam

Smithfield CEO: Higher Food Prices Are Here To Stay

Phoenix Capital Research
April 4, 2011

Here’s a zinger of a news story that most commentators haven’t bothered to take note of…

The CEO of Smithfield Farms, the largest pork producer in the US. Among other things he said:

“Maybe to someone in the upper incomes it doesn’t matter what the price of a pound of bacon is, or what the price of a ham, or the price of a pound of pork chops is,” he says. “But for many of the customers we sell to, it really does matter.” Workers can share cars when the price of oil rises, he quips, but “you can’t share your food.”

Mr. Pope also worries about the impact on farmers, who are leveraging up operations to afford the ever-rising price of land and fertilizer that has resulted from the increased corn demand. “There are record prices for livestock but farmers are exiting the business!” he exclaims. “Why? Farmers know they won’t make money.”

Weather is a factor, too. “We’ve had the luxury for the last three years of extremely good corn crops, with high yields and good growing conditions. We are just one bad weather event away from potentially $10 corn, which once again is another 50% increase in the input cost to our live production.”

…Not all companies will survive this economic whirlwind. Mr. Pope recalls what happened the last time there was a surge in corn prices, in 2008: “The largest chicken processor in the United States, Pilgrim’s Pride, filed for bankruptcy.” They “couldn’t raise prices, so their cost of production went up dramatically.” Could it happen again? “It darn well could!” Mr. Pope exclaims.

…Mr. Pope says the “losers” here “are the consumer, who’s going to have to pay more for the product, and the livestock farmer who’s going to have to buy high-priced grain that he can’t afford because he’s stretching his own lines of credit. The hog farmer . . . is in jeopardy of simply going out of business ’cause he doesn’t have the cash liquidity to even pay for the corn to pay for the input to raise the hog. It’s a dynamic that we can’t sustain.”

So here’s a CEO, someone with actual business experience (not some moron academic who’s never run a business a day in his life) telling us the following:

* Food prices are up a lot and going higher in the future.

* Despite high food prices, farmers are quitting farming (lower supplies are coming).

* Food companies will be going bankrupt (even lower supplies are coming).

In other words, we are rapidly heading into a food crisis. Food prices are NOT going to be coming down. And we’re going to be seeing food shortages in the US in the coming months.

Smart folks are already preparing their families and portfolios for what’s to come.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: food; inflation; prices; shortages
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1 posted on 05/04/2011 6:47:37 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam
"we’re going to be seeing food shortages in the US in the coming months. "

Bravo Sierra. Weren't we told we were going to have food riot in the Fall of 2009 Summer of 2010?
2 posted on 05/04/2011 6:50:56 PM PDT by Perdogg (0bama got 0sama?? Really, was 0sama on the golf course?)
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To: blam

This is from an alarmist blog.

The sky is falling!! The sky is falling!!


3 posted on 05/04/2011 6:51:26 PM PDT by Emperor Palpatine (One of these days, Alice....one of these days.....POW!! Right in the kisser!!!!)
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To: blam

With the dollar dropping, our farmers will switch to selling more overseas... food here will continue to go up in price.


4 posted on 05/04/2011 6:53:46 PM PDT by GOPJ (Osama bin SEALed - http://www.citizenwarrior.com/2009/05/terrifying-brilliance-of-islam.html)
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To: Emperor Palpatine
The drought in China continues apace.

Wheat is one of their most important farm products ~ but there won't be any.

5 posted on 05/04/2011 6:53:57 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: Emperor Palpatine
"This is from an alarmist blog."

Well...it is alarming news.

Warnings of the CEO of the largest pork producer in the US should be ignored?

6 posted on 05/04/2011 6:56:50 PM PDT by blam
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To: muawiyah

There won’t be much corn or soybeans in this country if the weather doesn’t settle down soon.It’s the 4th of May and there is nothing planted yet here in central Ohio.The rest of the midwest is the same-too wet and too cold.


7 posted on 05/04/2011 6:58:25 PM PDT by Farmer Dean (stop worrying about what they want to do to you,start thinking about what you want to do to them)
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To: Perdogg

What he means is “higher prices”. Won’t bother me and mine much, but I certainly hope that the Hope and Change voters enjoy them.


8 posted on 05/04/2011 6:59:35 PM PDT by achilles2000 ("I'll agree to save the whales as long as we can deport the liberals")
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To: Farmer Dean
It was 48 degrees here on the Gulf Coast last night.

We were making humorous comments (at our regular Tuesday night card game) about putting 'smoke pots' out in our gardens.

9 posted on 05/04/2011 7:02:43 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

If this years corn crop is low due to poor planting weather, the price of corn should go up. Shouldn’t that also raise the price of corn ethanol and the gasoline/ethanol blends?


10 posted on 05/04/2011 7:05:56 PM PDT by The Great RJ (The Bill of Rights: Another bill members of Congress haven't read.)
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To: achilles2000

but I certainly hope that the Hope and Change voters enjoy them.

_____________________

They don’t sweat the prices after all they pay no taxes, their kids get 2 free meals at school and we both know who is buying the food the morbidly obese mother is eating! Hope and change my butt...


11 posted on 05/04/2011 7:07:10 PM PDT by JohnD9207 (John McCain is a proud Ted Kennedy conservative!)
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To: Farmer Dean

“It’s the 4th of May and there is nothing planted yet here in central Ohio.The rest of the midwest is the same-too wet and too cold.”

Same here in southern Wisconsin. I kind of thought they’d at least disk these past two days, but...nothing. There are 700 acres around me just aching to be planted with sweet corn, but the soil is still too cold. And rain again, tomorrow!!


12 posted on 05/04/2011 7:07:42 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set...)
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To: blam
The CEO of Smithfield Farms, the largest pork producer in the US

And I should add the CRAPPIEST pork producer. I wouldn't eat that mushy, salt soaked garbage. Foul tasting. I am very lucky to live in a small town with a real butcher shop and pork that comes from smaller, better producers. Otherwise I'd have to quit eating pork.

A couple of years ago I was in a hurry and picked up some Smithfield chops at Kroger to save a little time on my way home, knowing I would be sorry. And we were. My wife and I threw out the pork after eating very little of it. That was some dinner.

Unfortunately, most/all the major grocery chains carry nothing but (in-eatable) Smithfield pork.

13 posted on 05/04/2011 7:09:11 PM PDT by ChildOfThe60s ( If you can remember the 60s....you weren't really there)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
I have (green) tomatoes bigger than golf balls already.

And, up the road from me are fields of golden wheat ready for harvest. I've never seen wheat growing this close to the Gulf Of Mexico.

14 posted on 05/04/2011 7:22:52 PM PDT by blam
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Plus our government blew the levee to flood all of that farmland in Missouri.


15 posted on 05/04/2011 7:28:54 PM PDT by Himyar
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To: The Great RJ
I don't know if you have noticed this but the blends is 80-85% ethanol yet every time they raise the price of 100% gas products they raise the price of ethanol too by the same amount so they are basically screwing us both ways.
16 posted on 05/04/2011 7:40:15 PM PDT by guitarplayer1953 (Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to GOD! Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Farmer Dean
Did you know the Mississsisssssssiiiiiiissssssippppppi Rivuh is so full of water it's tributaries are BACKING UP.

This is a 500 year flood. (Which doesn't mean it only happens every 500 years ~ rather, it could happen every year but in 500 years it would usually only go this high).

Among tributaries are the Ohio, the Wabash, the Miami, the Monongahela and that other one eh.

The Corps of Engineers is currently at work figuring out how to STOP THE TENNESSEE RIVER in its entirity.

Soybeans are of secondary interest as a source of food ~ fancy beans are primary, and that Delta country being "saved" (Not Likely) is a chunk of bean country, as is the area they just flooded, as is Mississippi County Arkansas, and Southeastern Indiana, and Western Kain-tuckeh.

This is an incredible disaster for Mexico!

For us it's a quite ordinary disaster.

17 posted on 05/04/2011 7:40:22 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: blam

Catfish supply in North Texas drying up

Restaurants are having trouble staying stocked as rising grain costs drive farmers to close ponds

A combination of cheap imports, high prices for corn-based catfish feed, high fuel costs and, until recently, low market prices for fish has made fish farming a money-losing proposition for many producers, Avery said. Then the recession has kept people from dining out, and much farm-raised catfish is consumed in restaurants, he said.

“Grain prices have gone up so high that it makes growing crops more profitable. We’ve gone through these cycles before, but this is more extreme,” Scott said.

Aside from foreign competition, the near-doubling of grain prices made fish farming unprofitable for many producers, since feed represents 60 percent of costs

http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/03/20/2936211/catfish-supply-drying-up.html

******

Ethanol subsidies help drain catfish ponds

“Catfish farmers across the South, unable to cope with the soaring cost of corn and soybean feed, are draining their ponds.... Corn and soybeans have nearly tripled in price in the last two years, for many reasons: harvest shortfalls, increasing demand by the Asian middle class, government mandates for corn to produce ethanol and, most recently, the flooding in the Midwest.”

Meanwhile, Congress does nothing about the aspect of this that they could address — agriculture subsidies in general, and ethanol subsidies in particular.

http://tinyurl.com/4yvlbmx


18 posted on 05/04/2011 7:41:51 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: Himyar
The Corps does lots of strange things. Right now they are underestimating the size of this flood. Blowing levees won't save Illinois from this one, and it probably won't save Southern Indiana either ~ but if they get some big enough holes in those levees now while they can get to them they'll be drained off before July and farming can begin.

If they don't blow 'em up the fields will be flooded until September!

19 posted on 05/04/2011 7:43:51 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

I went to Safeway today. Bought a pound of Hormel bacon for $7.49. It was on sale.....down from $8.49. As I put it in the fridge, I noticed it was only a 12 ounce package. I think our next bacon, lettuce and tomato sandwiches will only be lettuce and tomatoes. I noticed many prices are staying the same, but the packages are much smaller. Example: six months ago I could buy a 14 ounce bag of Lay’s potato chips for $3.99. Today I paid $3.99 for 10.5 ounces.


20 posted on 05/04/2011 7:48:48 PM PDT by Rushmore Rocks
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