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Market remains hot but sales cool

Machinery makers face shortages of parts, supply chain delays, rising costs for labour and transportation as COVID disrupts the business.
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Farm equipment makers are finding themselves challenged by many factors, most of which stem from COVID-19 in one way or another.

WESTERN PRODUCER — Farm equipment sales are down for Canada and United States, with Canada showing significant drops from last year on the largest gear.

This year, four-wheel drive tractors and combines in Canada saw sales fall 22 percent from last season at this time.

American numbers were better, but followed the same trend, with four-wheel drive tractors off six percent and combines down two percent.

“Combines were up last month (year over year in Canada). But down is the trend right now,” said Curt Blades of the Association of Equipment Manufacturers.

“They are selling, but there are a lot of factors at play in a very unusual time for the farm equipment industry,” he said.

Farmers, in many cases, are in positions to buy new equipment this year. High input costs are causing some concern, however even higher commodity prices have left many producers in North America with some optimism about the future and Blades said that has a big influence on sales.

“Trouble isn’t with demand. We have come off two years of white-hot demand. But the manufacturers have found themselves tested to be able to supply it,” he said.

“You might hear in the national news that the COVID-slowed supply chain issues are improving. Maybe up to 80 percent OK, now? But you need 100 percent to deliver a tractor or combine. Eighty percent won’t get it done.”

Dealers could be selling more new equipment, but their abilities to supply producers with the machines, especially in a timely way, are impeded by supply.

“It is a really strange situation and we are hearing more from Canadian companies more than even the U.S. ones, that they are having a heck of a time getting what they need to build equipment,” said Blades.

“They are definitely speaking up about it and we hear them,” he said.

The decisions to make large farm equipment purchases on the farm don’t come along too often and missing out on profitable years is disappointing to manufacturers.

“A farmer, if lucky, gets 60 crops, 60 paycheques. Sixty chances to make a large buying decision and they don’t do that every year. But they buy parts every season. And that is the current focus for some of our members. Keeping farmers rolling,” he said.

“There is 40 years of equipment out there that is currently putting in and taking off the crops. Keeping all those wear-parts ready to make that happen. The ability to deliver more new equipment will improve over time, but crops have to be grown now,” he said.

So far this year, Canadian farmers have bought 728 new combines, versus 934 last year. The four-wheel drive tractor market has seen 427 delivered compared to 546 last year by this time. American farmers bought 1,633 four-wheel drive tractors so far this year, down from 1,731 last year, while combines were steady, down just two percent, with 2,865 this year and 2,930 last season.

Blades said many manufacturers take their role in feeding the world very seriously. One recently told him that other sectors of the economy might be waiting to deliver on new technology and equipment, but “he said ag needs to be better. We as companies need to be better. He seemed pretty confident that they would get there and motivated to do it.”

Farm equipment components, and the larger manufacturers themselves, are global. Parts come from around the planet and companies have factories scattered across it as well.

Italy is one of the larger farm technology engineering and manufacturing hubs. And it was one of the places COVID-19 hit the hardest early in the pandemic. Those lockdowns and worker shortages left manufacturers unable to complete new equipment orders.

“(Computer) chips are still a thing, but improving. But even if it wasn’t the components, we would still be talking about COVID’s effects on companies. It would be a labour story,” said Blades.

“Workers have made a lot of choices. About retirement, about career changes. There are generational shifts, people looking for new work-life balances and the labour issues are piling up for manufacturers, like every other sector of the economy. It is a lot to work with all at once,” he said.

Equipment companies have to remain competitive, as farmers compete on a global basis for their commodities and prices of the tools have to reflect their economic realities, he said.

“And then there are new geo-political issues. Where a company can or will source things might have changed, where they might locate a plant. Long term decisions are changing. Re-shoring needs to be considered and weighed against costs. A challenging time for these companies,” he said.

Back on the farm it also means that has become harder for manufacturers to commit to prices for machines that haven’t been built yet, as everything from interest rates and labour costs to steel prices are in flux.

“In some cases, companies were absorbing some new costs, including basics like transportation. Many can’t ignore it anymore. Prices for new equipment are going to be rising. That is something that can be counted on for the most part,” said Blades.

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