Machinery Pete: The Hottest Market I’ve Ever Seen

This latest rise in used equipment values is, frankly, breathtaking.

2001 John Deere 7810
2001 John Deere 7810
(Machinery Pete)

I don’t say this lightly. But early 2021 is the hottest used equipment market I’ve witnessed. Please understand my deep Scandinavian roots and distaste for hyperbole when I say this. But, truth is truth; the numbers don’t lie.

The only comparable period I’ve seen was November 2007 into early 2008. Back then, high-commodity prices fueled by the rise of ethanol caused exploding values and sales for new and used equipment. The same trend hap-pened in 1973 when buyers literally had to take a number to buy equipment.

Then and now, availability became the driving market factor. When any market becomes focused on availability, pricing is secondary. And prices rise — quickly.

Here are a few of the truths and forces at play in the equipment market:

  • Manufacturers smartly reigned in production forecasts a year ago, once the pandemic settled over us.
  • A commodity price surge last fall and into 2021 spurred buyer demand.
  • The price of steel rose rapidly in late 2020 into this year.
  • Worldwide transportation and shipping issues mounted late last year and into early 2021.
  • The used inventory at farm equipment dealers dropped to low levels.
  • Dealers’ pool of “off-lease” machines has dried up significantly.
  • The rise of online auctions has been huge the last 12 months, allowing motivated buyers from a bigger geographic footprint to click again and again.

This latest rise in used equipment values is, frankly, breathtaking. I saw a 2007 John Deere 9620 4WD tractor with one owner and 1,255 hours sell for $270,000 on March 21 in northwest Iowa.

How high is that? The previous high price on a 9620 was $195,000 more than12 years ago. It was a 2006 model with only 683 hours.

See the table below for more:

If you happened to be in the market for used precision ag equipment early this year — yikes. The rising values have been eye-opening.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Data shows late-planted corn can “cheat” the clock with GDU acceleration, making the case for holding the line on your original hybrids for now.
From “for sale by owner” gems to retirement sales in Iowa, see the latest prices on used Kubota, John Deere and New Holland equipment.
Sidedressing is often the best opportunity in-season to address corn nutrient needs, but Ken Ferrie urges caution if you plan to go with “blind sidedressing” before the crop emerges or at spike. He offers three considerations.
Read Next
A new survey of farmers and ranchers highlights growing frustration with Washington and reveals how the widening divide between rural and urban America continues reshaping politics, trust and the ag vote.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App