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Farm Bill/Dairy Policy February 26, 2014 Dairy Gross Margin, LLC Dr. Scott Brown Agricultural Markets and Policy Division of Applied.

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Presentation on theme: "Farm Bill/Dairy Policy February 26, 2014 Dairy Gross Margin, LLC Dr. Scott Brown Agricultural Markets and Policy Division of Applied."— Presentation transcript:

1 http://amap.missouri.edu Farm Bill/Dairy Policy February 26, 2014 Dairy Gross Margin, LLC Dr. Scott Brown Agricultural Markets and Policy Division of Applied Social Sciences brownsc@missouri.edu

2 The Long Road To A Farm Bill Ends August 2011 August 2011 - The Budget Control Act of 2011 was passed. April 26, 2012April 26, 2012- The Senate Agriculture Committee passes a Farm Bill. June 21, 2012June 21, 2012- The Senate passes a Farm Bill. July 12, 2012July 12, 2012- The House Agriculture Committee passes a Farm Bill. December 31, 2012December 31, 2012- The Farm Bill is Extended for One Year. May 14, 2013May 14, 2013- The Senate Agriculture Committee passes a Farm Bill. May 15, 2013May 15, 2013- The House Agriculture Committee passes a Farm Bill. June 10, 2013June 10, 2013- The Senate passes a Farm Bill. June 20, 2013June 20, 2013- The Farm Bill fails on the House floor. July 11, 2013July 11, 2013- The House passes a “Farm Only” Farm Bill. September 19, 2013September 19, 2013- The House passes a nutrition bill. January 29, 2014January 29, 2014- The House passes a Farm Bill conference report. February 3, 2014February 3, 2014- The Senate passes a cloture motion on the Farm Bill conference report. February 4, 2014February 4, 2014- The Senate passes the Farm Bill conference report. February 7, 2014February 7, 2014- President Obama signs the Farm Bill conference report. Source: Modified from farmpolicy.com

3 A Fundamental Change In Dairy Policy  New farm bill dairy provisions give a new level of flexibility for dairy producers  Program flexibility requires additional homework for producers to optimize their participation in the program  MILC gives way to new program flexibility  No production caps  Coverage quantity and margin level has flexibility  Pay particular attention to the final language  Dairy policy evolved in the last few weeks  Some important changes relative to earlier versions

4 USDA Rulemaking Will Be Critical The exact operation of the new farm bill depends on USDA interpretation of the legislative language.

5 Major Dairy Provisions in AA2014  Creates a margin protection program  Creates a dairy product donation program  Repeals the MILC program after the margin protection program is operational  Repeals the dairy product price support program  Repeals the dairy export incentive program  Extends the dairy forward pricing program

6 When Will The Margin Program Begin?  USDA must begin the program no later than September 1, 2014  Difficult for USDA to start earlier than that date  Suggests signup will have to occur in the July/August timeframe  Begin your selection process now as signup will likely be up against the deadline  $100 registration fee gets $4.00 margin coverage  Margin payments will occur on a bimonthly basis beginning with January/February

7 National Program Margin Calculation  All Milk Price less Feed Cost  The average cost of feed for a dairy operation required to produce a Cwt. of milk, determined in accordance with the following formula: [1.0728 x price of corn/bu.] + [0.00735 x price of soybean meal/ton] + [0.0137 x price of alfalfa hay/ton].  Milk, corn and alfalfa prices reported in Agricultural Prices; soybean meal price is Central Illinois, USDA/AMS  The calculation required by this subsection shall be made as soon as practicable using the full-month price of the applicable reference month.  A lag in information, the January all milk price released at the end of February  It will take USDA time to process payments

8 Feed Costs From NMPF’s Original Work With One Modification

9 Historical Monthly U.S. Margin

10 Hoard’s Webinar – Percentage of Producer Participation

11 Producers Should Calculate Their Own Margin  It is important to know how your margin changes over time relative to the national margin  The higher the correlation between a producer’s margin and the national margin the better the safety net  I have heard, “I am not participating because my margin is different than the national margin.”  My response, “The level doesn’t matter as much as the month to month movements. Are you sure about participation?”  Take the time to do the comparison!  Change the mentality to insurance versus program maximization

12 Producers Will Be Assigned A Production History  Highest annual milk marketings during 2011, 2012 or 2013.  USDA will adjust production history annually to reflect an increase in U.S. milk production  An operation’s marketings growth does not matter in the adjustment to production history  New dairy operations  Volume of actual milk marketings extrapolated to a yearly amount  Estimated from herd size

13 A 2 Million Pound Production History Producer And Annual U.S. Milk Production Grows by 2% Annually

14 Higher Premiums At Higher Margin Coverage Levels

15 Hoard’s Webinar – Best Margin Level

16 Compare The Added Cost For Each $0.50 Of Additional Margin Protection $0.54 increase in premium For $0.50 more margin coverage

17 Selection of Coverage Percentage  A producer can choose to cover 25 to 90 percent of their production history in 5 percent increments annually  Creates interesting tradeoffs between coverage level and coverage quantity  If you expect low margins, high coverage level and quantity  If you expect high margins Reduce coverage level Reduce coverage quantity Reduce both Reduce neither

18 Hoard’s Webinar – Annual Adjustment

19 How Much Risk Can Your Operation Afford? $4.00 $8.00 $6.00 25% 90%60% Greater Protection at a greater cost Coverage Quantity Coverage Level

20 Dairy Product Donation Program  Must be operational no later than 120 days after the margin program begins  When the margin is less than $4.00 for the two preceding months, this feature becomes operational  Secretary purchases dairy products at prevailing market prices and distributes to public and private nonprofits assisting low- income households  This program suspended:  After three months of operation  Margins move above $4.00  Margins between $3.00 and $4.00 AND U.S. prices exceed world prices by more than 5%  Margins less than $3.00 AND U.S. prices exceed world prices by more than 7%

21 Hoard’s Webinar – Dairy Product Donation Program Large Purchases

22 USDA Regulations Will Clarify Program Operation  Do I get payments on production history even if I don’t produce that amount?  Premium rates for those over 4 million pounds of production history  There will be other USDA interpretations that will make a difference

23 Summary  Do not forget that how other producers choose to participate should affect your choice  Large participation means low margins remain longer  Small participation means many producers see full market effects of low margins  This is a large change in dairy policy  Spend time thinking how your operation should participate  If your operation can not afford risk increase coverage  Each operation is unique


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