The bright side to higher food prices is that the S&P agricultural chemical index should finally be finished a brutal bear market. This group has been savaged by the collapse in agricultural commodity prices, worries about the return of Argentine supply and China's future import growth. The good news is that these headwinds are more than discounted. The share price ratio is close to a decade low, expectations are now extremely washed out, valuations are dirt cheap and the industry has retrenched, creating an attractive reward/risk profile. Importantly, the combination of U.S. dollar softness and two years of farming financial pain are sowing the seeds for a recovery in food prices. Global grain production contracted last year, after several years of strong growth, while shipments of pesticides and fertilizers are accelerating. Typically, food prices recover after production falls, particularly if the U.S. dollar declines. A weaker U.S. dollar boosts purchasing power in the rest of the world, which bodes well for increased food consumption, and it reduces the ability of global food exporters to flood the market and keep prices depressed. Higher food prices would stop the erosion in farming real estate values after a difficult few years, a necessary step to improving capital availability. Already, cash rents are off their lows, a positive sign for underlying property valuations. In sum, current agricultural conditions are depressed, but we can envision a slow but steady improvement as food prices climb on the back of a weaker U.S. dollar and supply restraint, which would support narrower risk premiums in related equities. Boost the S&P agricultural chemicals to overweight from underweight, locking in a 34% profit on this call, and please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5FERT - MON, MOS, CF, FMC.
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