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AgriLogic’s
Proprietary Econometric Model - NATMOD
The major factor that makes AgriLogic, Inc. unique in the market
place is our large-scale econometric models. These models project
future trends in supply and demand, commodity prices, input costs,
operating margin spreads, and farmland values at the national and
regional levels. AgriLogic has developed, tested, and applied these
models over a number of years and has perfected them to the point
that they provide meaningful and reliable information to commercial
clientele. Multiple consulting projects completed for such entities
as the United Soybean Board, National Corn Growers Association, National
Association of State Directors of Agriculture (NASDA), Farm Credit
Administration, and the Farm Credit Council are evidence of the recognition
these models have received.
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| The principle value of these econometric models to our
clientele is the ability to assess how specific market conditions and
policy events in Washington and around the globe will affect production,
prices, and government outlays. The simultaneous econometric models
forecast the effects at the national, state, regional, county, and
individual producer level. |
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Our econometric models project future trends for over
150 crop and 40 livestock products and account for changes in farm
program policy, macro-economic policy, foreign trade, weather, and
disease. These models have full simultaneity between the crop and livestock
sectors that allow for feedback between the two sectors. In addition,
the model fully accounts for the supply and demand in the agriculture
input sector. No other company has this modeling capability; not for
agriculture, not for agricultural-related sectors, and not for the
non-farm business sectors in the economy.
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This figure summarizes the
major model relationships in our econometric models. The green arrow
identifies the interrelationships between the crop and livestock commodity
markets. Both sectors borrow capital in farm financial markets, which
in turn are influenced by trends in national money markets and global
economic activity. Farm input suppliers provide fixed and variable
inputs to farmers, and are also influenced by non-farm product developments
that affect input prices in our econometric models. |
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