The Borneo Post

US grain companies fear harm from new tax law

- — Reuters photo

“It is going to put us out of business as a private if something is not changed right off the bat.” Doug Bell, president and general manager of Bell Enterprise­s Inc

The new US tax law is poised to drive more control over the nation’s grain supply to farmerowne­d cooperativ­es, provoking concern among ethanol producers and privately run grain handlers that they could be squeezed out of the competitio­n to buy crops.

Until now, the cooperativ­es, private companies and publicly traded firms had a more even opportunit­y to handle the grain supply used in everything from loaves of bread in supermarke­ts to livestock feed.

The changes mean massive grain traders such as Archer Daniels Midland Co, Bunge Ltd and Cargill Inc could find it difficult to source corn, soybeans and wheat.

The perceived threat to these companies stems from a provision included in the final stages of the law’s passage in December. It gives farmers such a big tax deduction for selling their produce to agricultur­al cooperativ­es that private firms fear their grains supply will dry up.

The provision was championed by Republican farm state senators including John Thune of South Dakota and John Hoeven of North Dakota.

Privately held Cargill said on Tuesday it was surprised the provision was added to the bill at the last minute and is evaluating its potential impact.

Rival ADM, which also produces ethanol, said it too was evaluating the provision and “various potential solutions” to it.

The new tax law allows farmers and ranchers to claim a 20 per cent deduction on all payments received on sales to cooperativ­es.

“It is going to put us out of business as a private if something is not changed right off the bat,” said Doug Bell, president and general manager of Bell Enterprise­s Inc, which operates grain elevators in central Illinois.

“There is just no reason whatsoever why a farmer would do business with anyone other than a co-op.”

The deductions could come as a massive boon to cash-strapped US grain farmers, who have struggled for at least four years amid a global grain glut and sluggish commodity prices.

Some farmers seeking to take advantage of the new deduction are already asking about transferri­ng grain they have stored at private elevators and selling it to cooperativ­es, Bell said. An associatio­n that represents cooperativ­es also has received questions from people who want to open new cooperativ­es.

The change focuses on a provision in the federal tax code that cuts taxes on proceeds from agricultur­al products – whether corn and soybeans, or milk and fresh fruit – that farmers and ranchers sell to farm cooperativ­es such as CHS Inc.

There is no comparable provision for farmers doing the same business with private or investor-owned companies.

“The advantage for the farmer is probably at least five times larger selling to a co-op versus not selling to a co-op,” said Paul Neiffer, an accountant at CliftonLar­sonAllen in Yakima, Washington.

Neiffer said he has received hundreds of calls and emails from private elevators upset about the law.

Chuck Conner, president and chief executive of the National Council of Farmer Cooperativ­es, said his organisati­on had begun to receive calls from people asking questions about starting a co-op to take advantage of the deduction.

“The producer/ member deduction is more generous than most of us thought possible a few months ago,” he said in an email to members.

The number of US farm cooperativ­es has been steadily shrinking in recent years, as they scramble to consolidat­e and stay competitiv­e amid the merger frenzy of major seed and chemical companies. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An early wheat crop in the Central Valley in Davis, California.
An early wheat crop in the Central Valley in Davis, California.

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