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Circling Back to Look at Agriculture Equipment Stocks - Deere (DE) and Agco (AG) |
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| Feb 16, 2009 05:30 PM UTC |
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Analyst
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Via Fund my Mutual Fund:
Agriculture is one of the most prominent long term themes from my investing standpoint; we've been involved in some shape since day 1 of the fund/blog. While I like to use fine instruments (individual equities) rather than broad (ETFs) in most cases, for readers who wanted an easy "1 stop shop" way to play the theme we outlined Market Vectors Agribusiness (MOO) [Sep 7, 2007: This MOO for You? An ETF to Play the Global Agriculture Boom] Within this you get fertilizer, equipment, seeds, irrigation - the whole crew One of the themes the fund is currently investing in is the secular agricultural boom as people in developing economies upgrade their food quality, as their incomes grow. Thus far, I have been focused mostly on the fertilizer companies, although the equipment and seed plays have also done great. I saw the greatest disconnect between what analysts thought would happen versus what I thought would happen in fertilizer [Oct 23, 2007: Analysts Still Doubting the Fertilizer Stocks - I'm Adding Potash Ahead of Earnings] but I also made some equipment plays in both Agco (AG) and CNH Global (CNH). However (and this seems like a lifetime away but it's only 3 quarters ago!) by spring 2008 I became very nervous about the parabolic rise in steel and how it would hurt input costs [Apr 24, 2008: Three Agricultural Stock Earnings Reports this AM] I sold my agriculture equipment makers to focus on fertilizer back in January 2008 [Jan 23: Closing Last of CNH Global]. Just easier to play the same trend in a more focused manner with the fertilizer. Input costs are rising for the equipment makers with costs of their raw goods rising [May 14, 2008: Deere Earnings - Why I'm Avoiding Equipment Stocks] Major ag equipment player Deere (DE) - I don't own the equipment stocks anymore; at some point the rising cost of steel, petrol products and the like will be hurting the bottom line unless they can pass all the costs along to farmers - over the next year if inflation does not abate this is the type of company who could see profit margins squeezed simply from the constant increase in input costs. [May 17, 2008: WSJ - Fast Rising Steel Prices Set Back Big Projects] Relentless increases in the price of steel are halting or slowing major construction projects world-wide and investments in shipbuilding and oil-and-gas exploration, setting the stage for a potential backlash against steelmakers. This strategy allowed us to benefit from the "ag trade" for about 90 days longer than the average bear, as fertilizer and equipment stocks began to diverge in a sharp way February 2008 through the summer. And then the bottom fell out on the whole trade - we got hit on the tail end. With Agco reporting last week, and Deere on tap this week - I thought it would be a good time to update where things stand from a fundamental basis. Agco
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