Prices for all types of hay lost ground during August, according to USDA’s most recent Agricultural Prices report.
The
all-hay price for August was pegged at $136 per ton, which was down $7
per ton from July but still $6 higher than August 2016. Hay other than
alfalfa dipped $10 per ton in August to $116, which equals the August
2016 price.
The August alfalfa hay price was $147 per ton, $5
lower than July but $10 per ton over the 2016 level. The alfalfa price
remains $19 above the low of $128 per ton set in January. Looking at the
past 10 years of USDA alfalfa price data, the August price has never
moved higher than the July price.
The USDA price averages account for all qualities of hay sold, and
the final U.S. estimate is a volume-weighted average rather than a
simple average of state values. Those states with the most volume sales
will impact the final U.S. dollar value more than those states with
fewer sales.
The leading alfalfa price gainers in August were New
York (plus $10 per ton), drought-stricken Montana (plus $10), Kansas
(plus $8), and another moisture-challenged state, North Dakota (plus
$8). Pennsylvania led price losers at minus $24 per ton followed by
Texas (minus $22), Ohio (minus $20), and Michigan (minus $15).
The
highest alfalfa hay prices are being reported from New York ($216 per
ton), Kentucky ($205 per ton), Texas ($194 per ton), and Oregon ($180
per ton).
For the second month in a row, the lowest prices can be
found in Minnesota ($86 per ton), Nebraska ($92 per ton), and Wisconsin
($97 per ton).
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