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Southwestern attendance continues to break records; industry appears bullish despite drought

Attendance at the 87th annual Southwestern Fertilizer Conference continues to break records, with some 1,590 attendees recorded in the meeting held July 14-17 in San Antonio. Conference organizer Pat Miller told Green Markets last week that attendance has gone up each year in the past ten except one – in 2006 – and it quickly rebounded thereafter.

Industry players appeared bullish, despite the worst drought in the U.S. since 1988. Most were enjoying the business from the large acreage planted this year and looking forward to large crops in 2013. “It was fairly positive, considering how bad the drought is,” said one source, talking about the mood at the conference. “There was lots of talk, but not that much went down regarding sales.”

Despite the drought, many were hopeful farmers will have money from higher commodity prices and crop insurance and will be ready to again plant fencerow-to-fencerow. Some said the drought may be worse than USDA’s recent crop yield estimate of 146 bushels per acre. One executive told Green Markets that 130 bushels per acre was now being commonly discussed. Other concerns were low water levels on the river system that were already starting to impede barge traffic, as well as scheduled lock closures on the Arkansas River.

Those with nitrogen appeared to be the most optimistic, and the common mantra that farmers always apply nitrogen was the theme. Indeed, NOLA urea and UAN prices did go up last week. The jury does appear to still be out on phosphates and potash, though sellers of both remained optimistic.

“They will buy the nitrogen, but will soil test for the others,” said one source.

“Bottom line, if you’re a farmer and you’ve got a drought situation with hot temperatures, and you truly don’t know what it’s going to yield, will you be buying any equipment or fertilizer?,” said another, who was more cautious. “I don’t think we’ll know a whole lot until the farmer gets into the field.”

Tying into this market commentary was conference speaker Glen Buckley, chief economist, NPK Fertilizer Advisory Service Inc. He said as the drought continues, the likelihood of USDA’s 146 bushels per acre on 88.9 million acres harvested becomes more remote. He noted that in the 1988 drought, the corn yield was 124 bushels per acre on 81 million acres harvested.

Regardless, Buckley is projecting 95 million acres of corn for 2013. He said there has to be normal moisture for a good fall season, particularly for ammonia. As of July 19, there were major weather reports that the drought could extend at least until November.

Assuming good weather, Buckley sees ammonia supplies as balanced-to-tight, with strong movement and limited supplies. He noted that the product in the Cornbelt held its ground this season, and that there is really no correlation between the Cornbelt price and Tampa.

As for urea, he said if river woes continue, NOLA could be a parking lot for urea in the next 30-60 days. Buckley said summer turnarounds are needed to bring urea back in balance. He noted that the international market is under pressure, and that an incredible amount of urea is headed this way as the U.S. market remains higher than the international market.

As for UAN, he said the market looks long, and that supply is not an issue.

He sees the phosphate market going sideways to slightly declining, and said the U.S. will likely see more imports from Russia and Morocco. While demand looks good, he expects supply will exceed demand.

Buckley called potash massively long. He said there will have to be more curtailments to balance the market. He expects 2012 world demand to drop to 52 million mt, with no upside from major buyers China and India. Potash producers in attendance were more upbeat, pointin

Barge movement impacted as river levels drop

New Orleans — The intense heat and lack of rainfall this summer has caused water levels on the Mississippi River and its tributaries to drop rapidly in recent weeks, prompting concerns about commercial barge movement as the harvest season approaches. Sources said barges were moving slowly on the lower Mississippi, tow sizes were being reduced, and loads on some vessels are being cut to below standard minimums to reduce the draft. The river has remained open but one lane of barge traffic has been closed, and barge depth was reduced to 8.5-9 feet, which reduces capacity by about 5 percent. The delays could add about three days to a trip from NOLA to St. Louis. There were reports as well that barges were unable to enter some slack-harbor locations last week due to narrowing channels, and larger vessels were reportedly staying put in New Orleans to avoid the risk of running aground. Terminals at Memphis were having trouble unloading barges because they cannot get close enough to the docks for the cranes to reach. Many of the facilities were water served only, which could spell trouble for some grain elevators. One source said river levels at his location were a full 50 feet lower than they were at the peak of Mississippi River flooding in May 2011.

Intrepid reports preliminary 2Q results

Denver — Intrepid Potash Inc. on July 17 announced preliminary sales and production results for the second quarter 2012. Intrepid estimates that it produced 165,000-175,000 st and sold 180,000-190,000 st of potash during the quarter. On a preliminary basis, Intrepid estimates that it produced 30,000-35,000 st and sold 25,000-30,000 st of Trio® during the second quarter of 2012. The company said it intentionally built a modest level of Trio® inventory during the quarter to accommodate larger bulk sales and manage shipments more effectively. The average net realized sales prices during the quarter were $460-$470/st for potash and $315-$325/st for Trio®.

Andersons to restock Fairmount, evaluates options

Maumee, Ohio — The Andersons’ Plant Nutrient Group announced plans July 19 to begin restocking its Fairmount, Ill., facility for distribution of its pelletized lime and gypsum products. The Fairmount plant discontinued production in December 2011, but continued to serve customers from existing inventories. Starting Aug. 1, this warehouse in east central Illinois will again be stocking NutraLime® Hi Cal Pelletized Lime and NutraSoft® Pelletized Gypsum for sale and distribution to dealers in Illinois and surrounding states. The Andersons is evaluating options to restart production at the Fairmount plant and/or build a greenfield pelletized production plant in that general market area.

Innophos buys AMT Labs

Cranbury, N.J. — Specialty phosphate maker Innophos Holdings Inc. said that it has completed the acquisition of AMT Labs, Inc., North Salt Lake, Utah. AMT is identified as a privately-held company that has been manufacturing high-quality custom ingredients for the food, beverage, confectionary, and nutraceutical industries for more than 20 years. AMT specializes in mineral ingredients essential to the human diet that are manufactured in various forms, including as chelates, to be easily digested (bioactive). Innophos says AMT is highly complementary to the Kelatron business acquired by Innophos in November 2011. The combined businesses of Kelatron and AMT make Innophos a leader in high growth U.S. bioactive mineral ingredients, with annualized revenues approximating $30 million. “The acquisition of AMT represents the second step in our adjacency strategy to expand in product categories closely related to our existing specialty phosphate product line,” said Randy Gress, Innophos chairman and CEO. An Innophos subsidiary purchased for cash 100 percent of the equity of AMT and an affiliated real estate company holding all AMT real property, including unused land and buildings to support future expansion. The combined purchase price was $27 million, with $19.5 million being allocated to the AMT purchase and $7.5 million being allocated to the real estate entity. The transaction includes potential for additional consideration contingent upon success in developing new market opportunities. Closing of the purchase occurred upon execution of the definitive agreements effective as of July 17. The acquisition is expected to be accretive to results in 2012.

Glencore/Viterra deal wins Canadian nod

Ottawa — Canada’s Minister of Industry on July 15 approved Glencore International PLC’s acquisition of Viterra Inc. under the Investment Canada Act. Glencore and Viterra signed a definitive agreement in March (GM March 26, p. 1) whereby Glencore will acquire all of the issued and outstanding shares of Viterra for C$16.25 per share. The transaction values Viterra’s equity at approximately C$6.1 billion on a fully diluted basis. Glencore reported that it has made a series of commitments to Canada for a five-year period, including increasing Viterra’s projected capital expenditures in Canada by more than C$100 million; investing C$8 million above Viterra’s projected expenditures in R&D; contributing toward grain industry initiatives in the province of Manitoba; working with the Government of Saskatchewan toward establishing a Global Institute for Food Security in the province, and contributing to this initiative should the government initiate the project; increasing contributions toward programs supporting the Western Canadian farm community by 25 percent; and making charitable contributions in support of youth and educational scholarships for First Nations and Metis. Glencore has also committed to maintaining the Regina, Sask., head office and making it the head office for its North American agricultural operations. The Viterra acquisition also involves Agrium Inc. and Richardson International, a privately held grain trader and input retailer based in Winnipeg. Richardson has agreed to acquire more than C$900 million worth of Viterra’s grain handling assets, crop input and processing facilities, and related working capital. Agrium will acquire the majority of Viterra’s Agri-products business, including 232 of Viterra’s Canadian farm-supply outlets, 17 farm outlets in Australia, and a minority stake in the Canadian Fertilizers Ltd. plant at Medicine Hat, Alberta, for C$1.15 billion. Agrium said in June said the Canadian Competition Bureau will begin a 45-day review of Glencore’s deals with Agrium and Richardson as soon as Glencore’s acquisition of Viterra is complete. Agrium’s deal with Glencore is expected to close in the fourth quarter.

Chicago Port to get sulfur prill plant

Chicago, Ill. — Savage Services Corp. plans to take advantage of an offer for a $175,000 property tax break from the City of Chicago to build a sulfur remelting prill plant along the Calumet River on the city’s South Side. The 3,000-square-foot plant will cost $12.7 million and will be on a six-acre site, according to the Chicago Tribune. The tax break will be received during the 12 years after construction.

CHS 3Q Wholesale volumes up 25 percent; retail unit reports record quarter

CHS Inc. reported that sales volumes from its Wholesale crop nutrient business were up 25 percent for the third quarter ending May 31, 2012. Revenues totaled $1.1 billion, up 43 percent, or $336.9 million from the year-ago quarter. Of the increase, $144.3 million was related to increased average fertilizer prices and $192.6 million was due to increased volumes. The average sales price of all fertilizers sold reflected an increase of $66.38/st, or 15 percent. Income was also up for the unit due to increased volumes and product margins.

CHS Country Operations, which sells crop nutrients, feed, crop protection, and energy products, reported record thirdquarter earnings due to heavy spring fieldwork and retail merchandise operating margins. Revenues were also up. As of May 31, 2012, CHS reported crop nutrient inventories valued at $202.2 million, down from the year-ago $325.2 million. They stood at $389.7 million March 31, 2012.

As of May 31, 2012, CHS had 699,000 st in crop nutrient purchase contracts and 894,000 st in sales contracts, compared to the year-ago 881,000 st and 1,251,000 st, respectively. March 31, 2012 purchase contracts were 1,177,000 st and sales at 1,420,000 st.

Crop nutrients are in the CHS Ag Business segment, which reported third-quarter operating income of $139.8 million on sales of $8 billion, compared to the year-ago $104.8 million on sales of $7.51 billion. Income before income taxes, however, was down at $131.9 million from $209.5 million.

Company-wide, CHS reported net income attributable to CHS was up 13 percent to $405.1 million on revenues of $11 billion, up from the year-ago $358.5 million and $10.5 billion, respectively. CHS attributed the increased earnings to the strong performance of its Energy segment.

Nine-month Wholesale crop nutrient volumes saw a 13 percent increase in volumes. Revenues totaled $2.3 billion, up $582.5 million (34 percent) from the year-ago period. Of this, $357.6 million was related to increased fertilizer prices, while $224.9 million was increased volumes. Fertilizer prices were up $78/st, or 18 percent over the year-ago levels. Again, CHS said Wholesale income was up.

Nine-month Country Operation income was flat, reflecting increased retail merchandise margins and decreased grain margins. Revenues were up.

The Ag Business segment reported nine-month operating income of $314.3 million on sales of $20.4 billion, down from the year-ago $340 million on sales of $18.5 billion. Income before income taxes was $289.5 million, down from $451.4 million.

Cooperative-wide, CHS reported nine-month net income was up 19 percent to $899.7 million on revenues of $29.6 billion, up from the year-ago $754.8 million on sales of $26.3 billion. CHS cited higher values for energy and crop nutrients products for the increase.

MosaicÆs 4Q earnings off 22 percent; cash flow allows for dividend boost

The Mosaic Co. net earnings attributable to Mosaic were off 22 percent during its fourth quarter ending May 31, 2012, to $507 million ($1.19 per diluted share) on sales of $2.82 billion, compared to the year-ago $649 million ($1.45 per share) on sales of $2.86 billion. The year-over-year decline was primarily driven by lower phosphate pricing.

Gross margins were $833.8 million, down from the year-ago $995.2 million, while operating earnings were $670.8 million, down from $824.9 million.

Despite the earnings drop, Mosaic exceeded its own guidance for the quarter and continues to pump out so much cash it is boosting dividends.

"We completed a fiscal year of significant accomplishments with a strong fourth quarter," said Jim Prokopanko, Mosaic president and CEO. "The extended spring season in North America, along with continuing strong demand for our products in Central and South America, led to solid financial results for the quarter. Despite challenging market conditions for much of the fiscal year, Mosaic made great progress. We improved our operating efficiency in both Potash and Phosphates, made substantial headway on our potash expansion projects, set new records for premium product sales and cash from operations, and, most important, our people delivered our best safety performance ever."

Fourth-quarter cash flow was $1.2 billion, compared to $973 million in the prior year. The year-over-year improvement was primarily driven by decreased North American phosphate inventory and increased customer prepayments.

"Our business continues to generate substantial cash," Prokopanko said. "While we remain committed to our multi-year, multi-billion-dollar investments for growth, we also have the ability to return capital to our shareholders through dividends and future share repurchases. Today we announced that we will double our annual dividend, to $1.00 per share; in fact, our dividend will have increased 400 percent since February of this year. This decision reflects our confidence in our ability to generate strong results over the long term, as well as our commitment to delivering tangible shareholder value."

Fourth-quarter Phosphate operating earnings were $224.1 million on sales of $1.79 million, down from the year-ago $369.9 million on sales of $1.88 million. The fourth-quarter average DAP selling price FOB plant was $494/mt, compared to $574/mt a year ago. Phosphates segment total sales volumes were 2.9 million mt, compared to 2.84 million mt a year ago. Mosaic’s North American finished phosphate production was 2.1 million mt, or 86 percent of operational capacity, flat with the same period a year ago. Curtailments early in the quarter were offset by subsequent high operating rates as the market tightened through the 2012 quarter.

Ammonia was down at $417/mt from the year-ago $476/mt, while sulfur was up slightly at $200/lt from $197/lt.

"Our Phosphates business ended the year on a strong note, with robust shipments worldwide," Prokopanko said. "The phosphate market has tightened, as producer inventories dropped dramatically with global demand more than offsetting lower sales to India. While ammonia prices have increased, we expect these cost increases to be offset by higher finished product prices. As a result, we expect the gross margin percentage in the first quarter of 2013 to remain essentially unchanged from the prior quarter. Increased production at the South Fort Meade mine should benefit our rock costs later in the year."

Fourth-quarter Potash operating earnings were $463.6 million on sales of $1.04 billion, down from the year-ago $469.2 million on sales of $982.4 million. Mosaic estimates sales volumes in the quarter were negatively impacted by approximately 100,000 mt resulting from the now resolved Canadian rail strike in May.

The fourth-quarter a

Yara reports strong 2Q results; Belle Plaine has record performance

Citing increased fertilizer sales volumes and improved urea margins, Yara International ASA on July 18 reported second-quarter net income after non-controlling interests of NOK 2,800 million (NOK 9.86 per share), compared with NOK 2,225 million (NOK 7.73 per share) last year. EBITDA was NOK 4,968 million, up from the year-ago NOK 3,455 million.

"Yara reports strong second-quarter results, reflecting a strong nitrogen fertilizer market and a significant increase in sales of Yara-produced fertilizer, especially outside Europe," said Jørgen Ole Haslestad, president and CEO. "Our value-added nitrate and NPK business continues to perform well, and we are also improving our commodity cost position with production growth in Pilbara and Qafco. With these initiatives, Yara’s gas and oil consumption outside Europe increases to almost 45 percent of the Yara total."

Citing strong demand and higher prices, Yara said its Belle Plaine, Sask., nitrogen complex posted record results during the quarter, when urea prices peaked. The complex is currently completing a 30-day turnaround and is returning to production.

Total sales volumes were 6.45 million mt during the quarter, up from the year-ago 6.15 million mt. Of this, some 5.25 million mt was fertilizer, which was up from the year-ago 4.97 million mt. Industrial volumes were 1.2 million mt, up from 1.18 million mt.

While global Yara fertilizer deliveries were up 6 percent, sales of Yara-produced fertilizer increased by 14 percent. Nitrate sales were up 13 percent from last year’s second quarter, reflecting increased sales in Europe and Latin America. Yara’s global energy costs declined 7 percent compared with the second quarter last year.

Nitrogen fertilizer industry deliveries for the 2011/12 season in Western Europe were 10 percent lower than a year earlier, as cold and dry spring planting conditions impacted overall consumption. However, Yara said it continued to take advantage of its ability to export premium products to overseas markets and ended the season with European stocks below a year earlier.

Second-quarter nitrogen fertilizer deliveries in Europe were primarily for immediate consumption, Yara reported, but pre-buying incentives for the new season are stronger than a year ago given the recent strengthening of grain prices.

Six-month net income was NOK 5,820 million on sales of NOK 42,726 million, versus the year-ago NOK 5,114 million on sales of NOK 38,440 million. EBITDA was NOK 9,280 million, up from NOK 7,736 million. Both fertilizer and industrial tons edged up during the period, for a combined 13.1 million mt from the year-ago 12.7 million mt. Fertilizer sales volumes were 10.7 million mt, up from 10.45 million mt, while industrial sales were 2.42 million mt, up from 2.24 million mt.

Going forward, Yara is predicting a continuance of high crop prices and tight grain supplies. It reports that its Qafco expansion is completed and will be onstream starting in July, with limited capacity additions elsewhere.

The Arab Spring-idled Libyan urea plant is in start-up mode, with the company doing extensive maintenance. It allotted NOK 40 million for additional start-up costs in the second quarter, with a like amount in the third quarter.