Chae1
Member
- Location
- Aberdeenshire
Did the people that didn't buy last week really expect the price to drop?
Through whom ?Cf 2nd offering £715/t today
Thought that was 46%Today was offered nitram for Sept delivery at£720 which I guess is the £715 price mentioned above
Yes , had 2 calls this am , never get any normallyDid the people that didn't buy last week really expect the price to drop?
What had it dropped to?Yes , had 2 calls this am , never get any normally
It hadn't , they were mug hunting I thinkWhat had it dropped to?
Did the people that didn't buy last week really expect the price to drop?
are you FIAS accredited... or, dare I say, Red Tractor...Ill sell you some at £795......
where've you been?It hadn't , they were mug hunting I think
That all makes sense to me, care to elaborate on the urea never mind bit?where've you been?
it was circa £780 two weeks back
it was circa $635 last week - I'm reliably informed some 130-150kt was committed
it's now around the £720 level - for Sept-Nov delivery. This kinda makes sense if you know they produce +/- 55kt per month
Urea meanwhile...never mind.
How many tonnes are you consuming annually? Just wondered what you might be waiting for.
Errr, isn't Nitram CF?My dislike of CF cost me a fair bit of money last week. Paid £645 for Nitram instead of £630 for CF.
Probably same stuff in different bags.
Hope not!Errr, isn't Nitram CF?
Yea, good old FIAS . Another of AIC"s schemes. The lumpy, dusty rubbish sometimes sent, all with a FIAS logo on the bag.are you FIAS accredited... or, dare I say, Red Tractor...
It might not be that i thought it would drop i have a smallish suckler herd and make hay and haylage for the equine market,and with current prices it just doesn’t add up.Did the people that didn't buy last week really expect the price to drop?
Sure!That all makes sense to me, care to elaborate on the urea never mind bit?
Hope there's loads of ridiculously cheap fodder this winter. I doubt it.It might not be that i thought it would drop i have a smallish suckler herd and make hay and haylage for the equine market,and with current prices it just doesn’t add up.
having done some figures it starts to become viable when there is a 5 in the front wether we ever see that again .
if you go on sml there is loads of ridiculously cheap fodder so wtf
Urea at 780/46=£16.90 kgSure!
The main source for UK is Egypt.
Algeria attracts duty at 6%
The last levels done would suggest farm levels would be in the range £730-£750 in big bags. The recent Egyptian sales, largely to cover short distributor sales into France and UK, have risen by around $30-$40/mt. Replacement today, I would imagine, would be at levels around £780, give or take
If you want to keep buying AN at £725, fair enough; it's a buyers prerogative. At current levels, Urea is "worth" £820, give or take? Conversely, Urea at say £780, makes AN worth about £650...
You pays your money and you takes your choice...
yup. that's the full difference. A lot of folk allow for 10% inefficiency factor.Urea at 780/46=£16.90 kg
34.5 x 16.90=£583 for N equivalent?
I'll apply it to your farm and bill you dld and spread.are you FIAS accredited... or, dare I say, Red Tractor...