The global population continues to expand at a steady pace, and agronomists believe that crop yields will need to double by 2050 to meet rising food demand. That should be leading to rising demand for fertilizer producers, but these firms haven’t seen much benefit from the trend in recent years. Blame goes to a weakening Chinese economy and lower commodity prices, which reduce farm incomes. The knockout punch came in July 2013 when Russian potash miner Uralkali decided to abandon cartel-like pricing policies and favor sales volumes over pricing. Potash is one of the three key compounds, along with nitrogen… Read More
The global population continues to expand at a steady pace, and agronomists believe that crop yields will need to double by 2050 to meet rising food demand. That should be leading to rising demand for fertilizer producers, but these firms haven’t seen much benefit from the trend in recent years. Blame goes to a weakening Chinese economy and lower commodity prices, which reduce farm incomes. The knockout punch came in July 2013 when Russian potash miner Uralkali decided to abandon cartel-like pricing policies and favor sales volumes over pricing. Potash is one of the three key compounds, along with nitrogen and phosphate, in organic fertilizers. #-ad_banner-#Until that seismic event, global potash prices had been set by two trading companies: the Belarusian Potash Company and Canpotex. The former is a joint venture between Uralkali and Belaruskali. The latter is controlled by Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, Inc. (NYSE: POT), Agrium, Inc. (NYSE: AGU) and The Mosaic Co. (NYSE: MOS). By limiting potash production, the group kept prices higher than natural supply and demand would allow. When Uralkali decided to produce at full capacity in 2013, the publicly-traded companies saw 30% of their market capitalization erased in a single… Read More