Gary Schnitkey, Ph.D., explains the seven habits of financially resilient farmers. He will also discuss the importance of monitoring cash flow and assessing risk management.

Key takeaways:

  • Topics
    • Evaluate farms by high and low profitability
    • Survey high-profit farms
    • Seven habits of financially resilient farmers
  • Seven Habits
    • Innovative but not on the bleeding edge of technology
    • Always evaluating new technologies
    • Return on investment is an important evaluation criteria
    • Cost control is paramount
    • Production is maintained at high levels
      • The right expertise is brought to the farms
    • Non-timing price opportunities are sought
  • Performance Groups
    • Central and Northern IL Counties
      • Champaign, Ford, McLean, Piatt
      • Dekalb, LaSalle, Lee, Ogle
      • Southern Illinois
    • Two time periods
      • High/rising returns: 2010 to 2012
      • Low/declining returns: 2014 to 2016
    • Define performance groups over 3-year horizon
      • Top 1/3 of returns
      • Mid 1/3 of returns
      • Low 1/3 of returns
  • Main cost factors
    • Direct
      • Seed, fertilizer, pesticide, drying and storage
    • Power
      • Machinery depreciation, hire, repair, fuel and oil utilities, light vehicle
    • Overhead
      • Hired labor, building, insurance, misc., non-land interest
  • Other characteristics
    • Farm size
      • High return group operate more acres
      • 100 to 200-acre difference across groups
    • Soil productivity not different across groups
    • Close to 50/50 corn/soy rotation
  • Take aways
    • Some farms outperform their peers consistently over time
    • These farms tend to have higher revenues and lower costs
      • Revenues accounted for larger share of difference during high return period
      • Costs accounts for larger share of difference during lower return period
    • Focused on operator and farmland returns
    • Do land costs tend to wash out these differences?
      • No – farms identified in higher return groups tended to have lower land costs, pay average or lower cash rents as well
  • Follow-up survey with producers
    • Face to face survey containing 56 questions with producers in central and east central Illinois (9 farms)
    • Most questions relate to the 2016 growing season
    • Survey includes questions to get at type of production and managerial practices
    • Goal of identifying common practices among the more profitable producers
      • General areas addressed
        • Size (acres) and labor force
        • Tillage practices
        • Planting practices
        • Growing season practices
        • Harvesting practices
        • Managerial practices
        • Attitudinal
  • Takeaways from follow-up survey
    • Generally typical production practices regarding tillage and rotation
    • Create additional value
    • Movement toward earlier planting of soybeans
    • Seeing rates reduced, all using some type of seed treatments
    • Seed selection mainly based on yield potential, herbicide use and disease resistance as compared to cost of seed
    • Used typical marketing and risk management strategies
    • Used newer technologies and production practices (seed treatments, draper heads, narrower rows, fungicides) but not on bleeding edge
    • Attention to detail and cost control very important to financial success

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