by Elliott Gue, editor Personal Finance
Drought now plagues roughly 56 percent of the contiguous US, the most
extensive water shortage in the 12-year history of the USDA's Drought
Monitor. In the near term, weather conditions will drive the bull market
for agricultural commodities.
However, the long-term outlook
appears sanguine, thanks to surging meat consumption in emerging
markets, epitomized by China. Here's how to harvest profits from the
coming boom in agriculture stocks.
Monsanto (
MON)
is the world leader in the production and development of GM seeds,
designed to exhibit certain beneficial traits such as resistance to
insects, herbicides and drought.
Corn is the single most
important crop for Monsanto, accounting for 60 percent of its profits in
the seeds and genomics business.
The US is the world's largest
producer and exporter of corn and is considered an established market
for GM seeds, but there are still opportunities for growth as Monsanto
releases new products.
Modern GM seeds often feature multiple
beneficial traits known as stacked traits. In 2010, Monsanto introduced
SmartStax, a GM corn seed that contains 8 beneficial traits, more than
double the number included in any type of seed introduced prior to
2010.
In the product's first year of availability, only 3
million of the 96 million acres planted with corn in the US used
SmartStax. This year, SmartStax and two other leading Monsanto GM corn
seeds are planted on more than 25 million acres.
For the third
quarter of its 2012 fiscal year, Monsanto pre-released positive earnings
and revenue guidance mid-quarter and then beat those raised
expectations when it reported results in late June. Monsanto is a buy
under $90.
Canada's
Potash Corp of Saskatchewan (
POT)
is the world's largest fertilizer company. As the name implies, the
firm dominates the production of potash, a fertilizer mined from ore
deposits located deep underground.
Fertilizing corn acreage
accounts for nearly 30 percent of global potash demand, and Potash Corp
of Saskatchewan alone accounts for about one-fifth of global
production capacity.
The stock pulled back last year and in early
2012 because of weak demand for potash. However, the outlook has
improved markedly into the second half of this year.
Farm
incomes are still solid because of rising corn and soybean prices, and
producers seek to boost crop yields by any means possible, including
intensive fertilization.
Over the long term, potash demand will
benefit from the need to increase the annual harvest of
fertilizer-intensive crops such as corn.
Further, emerging
economies such as Brazil, India and China are expected to step up their
fertilizer use per acre. Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan rates a buy
under $65.
CF Industries (
CF), the largest North American producer of nitrogen-based fertilizer, is a more direct play on surging corn prices.
Natural
gas prices account for up to 90 percent of the cost of producing
nitrogen-based fertilizers. US natural gas prices are by far the lowest
in the world and should remain depressed over the next few years. This
cost advantage gives CF Industries a considerable leg up on overseas
competitors.
Corn is the most nitrogen-intensive major field
crop; increased US corn acreage relative to soybeans and wheat will
boost demand for the nutrient. We're adding CF Industries to the Growth
Portfolio as a buy under $220.
Deere & Co. (
DE) is the world's largest producer of farm machinery and equipment such as tractors, combines and harvesters.
The
most important drivers of demand for large farm equipment are farmer's
income and access to credit. The USDA projects that US farmers' cash
receipts in 2012 will top an all-time high of $364 billion, driven by
strong demand and pricing for key crops such as corn and soybeans.
At
the same time, years of solid crop demand and pricing have reduced the
average farmer's debt-to-asset ratio to about 10 percent from roughly 15
percent in 1999. That makes Deere's equipment more affordable and
allows the company to offer attractive financing options through its
credit arm.
Although the Illinois-based company still generates
the majority of its sales from the US and Canada, the firm aims to
generate more than 50 percent of sales from outside the region by 2018.
This
goal is eminently doable, as farmers in emerging nations increasingly
covet the company's modern equipment and obtain the wherewithal to pay
for it. Deere & Co. rates a buy under $100.