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Message
Arkansas farmer bankruptcies way up?
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:05 am
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:05 am
Heard about it this am. Rice farming is massive in Arkansas.
Are y’all doing ok?
Are y’all doing ok?
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:07 am to AGGIES
Our farmers have been complaining about losses 3x higher than anyone else. I'm starting to think we're just not very good at the business aspect of it.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:09 am to realbuffinator
Buy everything at retail selling at wholesale and lose exports. You do the math.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:11 am to Rooski
I am one of the retails they're buying from. You're not teaching me anything.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:19 am to realbuffinator
Lower your price to reflect the commodity price.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:20 am to Rooski
quote:
Lower your price to reflect the commodity price.
Your business plan is to convince someone else to lower their prices for no reason?
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:21 am to realbuffinator
Trump is liquidating the kulaks
Why would you buy American rice when you could buy poo rice from our second greatest ally India
Why would you buy American rice when you could buy poo rice from our second greatest ally India
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:33 am to moneyg
Competition will do that. You can't sell anything without perceived value anymore.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:46 am to AGGIES
Not just AR. The entire Delta is rough right now for row croppers (corn, soy, cotton) especially. Went to a meeting hosted by the Dept of Ag a few weeks back. Main takeaways:
1. Commodity crises have cratered due to 3 factors:
- Reduced demand for our products due to the trade war with China.
- Some of our competitors, namely Brazil, have stepped up production and were well positioned to fill the void when the trade war started.
- 2025 had a record harvest for corn. Just bad luck on that one.
2. At the same time, input prices for fertilizer, potash, and other amendments have inflated due to tariffs. This is killing margins. At the meeting I attended, it was shared that farmers in the Delta are losing an average of $300/are on soybeans. It's going to be awful.
3. Outside of Brazil, we're also seeing more competition from Mexico and other LATAM countries.
Saying farmers are all of the sudden "not good at business" is a stupid take. (Someone commented this above.)
A bunch of external factors are ruining people and many of the smaller family farms that will fold will be gobbled up by international operations that don't give two shits about our country.
Personally, I'd rather have American families growing my food than foreign interests.
1. Commodity crises have cratered due to 3 factors:
- Reduced demand for our products due to the trade war with China.
- Some of our competitors, namely Brazil, have stepped up production and were well positioned to fill the void when the trade war started.
- 2025 had a record harvest for corn. Just bad luck on that one.
2. At the same time, input prices for fertilizer, potash, and other amendments have inflated due to tariffs. This is killing margins. At the meeting I attended, it was shared that farmers in the Delta are losing an average of $300/are on soybeans. It's going to be awful.
3. Outside of Brazil, we're also seeing more competition from Mexico and other LATAM countries.
Saying farmers are all of the sudden "not good at business" is a stupid take. (Someone commented this above.)
A bunch of external factors are ruining people and many of the smaller family farms that will fold will be gobbled up by international operations that don't give two shits about our country.
Personally, I'd rather have American families growing my food than foreign interests.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 9:56 am to AGGIES
I saw a good video on this the other day. Basically the seed suppliers and the wholesalers all consolidated within the past decade, leaving the farmers with zero options on where to buy seeds or sell crops so the cargills of the world are making record profits while the farmers are going bankrupt.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 10:15 am to Sharlo
quote:
Delta are losing an average of $300/are on soybeans
If someone is doing this then they suck at farming soybeans
The avg yield in the delta is over 60 bushels per acre. At $10 beans there input cost would be $900/ac of soybeans which is almost not possible
Rice and Cotton - yea you might be losing $300/ac
Posted on 2/18/26 at 10:17 am to AGGIES
Guess Arkansas is different. All the farmers in my area (myself included) seem to be doing great.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 10:18 am to Midtiger farm
quote:
Rice and Cotton - yea you might be losing $300/ac
My bad, you are correct. He said cotton was losing $300/acre. Beans losing money, too, but not that bad.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 10:22 am to Midtiger farm
As landowners we made $158/ac on a record corn crop 234/bu/ac in 2025.
Sold for the lowest price in 25 years ($3.98 & $3.68/bu). Between interest & input I’m not sure how long my guys can continue.
$7.50/bu corn may never happen again.
Sold for the lowest price in 25 years ($3.98 & $3.68/bu). Between interest & input I’m not sure how long my guys can continue.
$7.50/bu corn may never happen again.
Posted on 2/19/26 at 8:52 am to Sharlo
That’s good info. Thanks.
I don’t the the admin calculated the impact of the trade wars/tariffs strategy all that well… and I hope they can correct this so farmers don’t need bailouts.
Farmers don’t want bailouts, if can be avoided. They want their business model to be profitable.
I don’t the the admin calculated the impact of the trade wars/tariffs strategy all that well… and I hope they can correct this so farmers don’t need bailouts.
Farmers don’t want bailouts, if can be avoided. They want their business model to be profitable.
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