Economy Surges; Will Ag Follow?

Newly revised numbers from the Commerce Department are indicating the gross domestic product (GDP) of the United States increased 3.1 percent from April to June, the fastest growth rate in more than two years.

The U.S. economy is surging in the second quarter. Newly revised numbers from the Commerce Department are indicating the gross domestic product (GDP) of the United States increased 3.1 percent from April to June, the fastest growth rate in more than two years.

The U.S. stock markets are continuing to hold near or above all-time highs. Tommy Grisafi, branch broker with Advance Trading, Inc. says these macroeconomic moves are the opposite of what farmers are experiencing in grains.

“If you had told me President Trump was going to win and the stock market was going to go up as much as it did and never be volatile, I would have said no,” says Grisafi. “It’s not and the stock market is probably closing at record highs right now.”

Grasafi says that means 401(k)s are likely higher than a year ago for more Americans.

“You see it going up every day and you look at your farm and say, ‘How are we losing money?’” asks Grisafi. “You wish there was more balance where everyone was making money.”

He compares the stock market bull run to when farmers experienced $8 corn.

“The row crop guy was happy but then the dairies, the cattlemen, the chicken and hog [producers] said we can’t feed $8 corn to animals,” says Grisafi.

Following the major fires and flooding from hurricanes, Grisafi says there may be other challenges associated with an expanding job market and low unemployment.

“With the storms that happened in Florida and Texas, if anyone in America needs a job and has the ability or the traits needed, they’re going to be building there for years,” says Grisafi. “We’re at full employment and the people who aren’t working, there’s probably a good chance they don’t want to.”

Grisafi believes rising crude prices will also help support the overall U.S. economy.

“Growers made more money when their input costs were a little higher,” says Grisafi. “A $60 barrel of crude should get the pumps going [in North Dakota] again and create jobs up there again.”

Grisafi says crude has been trading relatively sideways for roughly the last year.

“A rising tide raises all ships and hopefully we’ll see something like here,” says Grisafi. “Maybe the rally that comes in grains is from overall energies increasing.”

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Jeff Hoogendoorn with Professional Ag Marketing says grains were still tied to crude oil today and corn and soybeans ended off their lows when that market recovered. Cattle fell despite record cash up to $260.
Darin Newsom, senior market analyst for Barchart, says the odds are slim that the war with Iran is over. So he thinks the grain markets will soon find support.
Diesel prices are just 20 cents from a record high, with multiple states already setting new records. Experts warn relief is uncertain as prices could remain elevated through 2026.
Read Next
“I’m just a farmer in their way,” says Georgia producer Jeff Melin. “Force me to sell, take my land, and fly in the billionaires and big companies.”
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App