masseybreaker
Member
- Location
- wakefield
just bought two loads of nitram £229 for jan the price will drop now !!
Jammy git !! hahajust bought two loads of nitram £229 for jan the price will drop now !!
Pulan 224 yesterday wynnstay farmersOffered Urea at £225/ton today. Dropped £50/ton since early Autumn?
Pulan at £235/ton.
Normal nonsense, prices about to rise, loads buying etc.
Offered Urea at £225/ton today. Dropped £50/ton since early Autumn?
Pulan at £235/ton.
Normal nonsense, prices about to rise, loads buying etc.
That's what I was quoted this afternoon. Rep was from a company we haven't bought from in years. Sadly we bought our requirements in the Autumn.Are those right? UREA is trading around the £245 mark (give or take a couple quid) and Imported AN is around the £220-£225 mark currently. I predict there will be some adjustment on the import's since C.F have come down. Replacement value on UREA is up today so please share where this UREA at £225 is from! Not sure on your supplier saying prices about to Rise when C.F cut their prices..
talk earlier this week with a fert rep the above are a tad dear,but maybe affected by delivery payment date etc ,his advice was take some and hang fire till later in the month ,interestingly when I enquired about a split load of straight N and a NPKno difference in price /ton re part load. The phrase january delivery discount was mentioned.Are those right? UREA is trading around the £245 mark (give or take a couple quid) and Imported AN is around the £220-£225 mark currently. I predict there will be some adjustment on the import's since C.F have come down. Replacement value on UREA is up today so please share where this UREA at £225 is from! Not sure on your supplier saying prices about to Rise when C.F cut their prices..
Anybody else feeling they have been furked.?
I think the fertiliser companies need to remember that they need the early buyers of fertiliser to get the product on to farms sometimes a year or more before it's required as they haven't got the storage or delivery capacity to keep all their customers requirements themselves.Anybody else feeling they have been furked.?
'Spect you are right.Not really, but feeling like I made a wrong decision which looked right at the time.
Anybody else feeling they have been furked.?
A deals a deal, I get that.
But no option to cancel early orders when events suggest it will not be needed, and then the buggers drop the price £20 as you are taking delivery.
Nope. I wouldn't like it if, having sold crop to merchant, they ring up in 6 weeks and complain about the price they had to pay for it when the market drops.Anybody else feeling they have been furked.?
A deals a deal, I get that.
But no option to cancel early orders when events suggest it will not be needed, and then the buggers drop the price £20 as you are taking delivery.
Anybody else feeling they have been furked.?
A deals a deal, I get that.
But no option to cancel early orders when events suggest it will not be needed, and then the buggers drop the price £20 as you are taking delivery.
I've just paid for my very expensive liquid. You win some you loose some, thankfully i didn't panic to much with wheat sales so it's swings and roundabouts I suppose.Not really, but feeling like I made a wrong decision which looked right at the time.
Expect the "property of the seller until paid in full" clauses to be carefully looked at next year.
My urea still looks cheap, but might not in a month's time. Or it might do.
Think my ond 19 pool wheat is starting to look like the poorest decision mind you.
Agree 100%.The Lithan sat in my shed is due to have half paid at the end of this month, and half at the end of Feb. Could I ask them to fetch it back do you think?
I agreed the deal at the time, so nobody's fault but mine.