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Volume 67, Number 2, Fall 2007
Research Key words: binomial logit, interest rate sensitivity, lender attributes, lender-borrower relationships "Combining Hedonic and Negative Exponential Techniques to Estimate the Market Value of Land" authored by Leah J. Tsoodle, Allen M. Featherstone, and Bill B. Golden Abstract Key words: hedonic model, negative exponential function, urban influence on land values
<top> "Structural Breaks and Agricultural Asset Allocation" authored by
Dustin L. Pendell and Allen M. Featherstone <top> "Capital Structure, Firm Size, and Efficiency: The Case of Farm Petroleum and Animal Feed Co-operatives in Canada" authored by Getu Hailu, Scott R. Jeffrey, and Ellen W. Goddard "Marginal Impact of Sales Consultant Visits and Financing Opportunities on Adoption of Variable-Rate Fertilizer Application" authored by William E. Nganje, Mary S. Friedrichsen, Cole R. Gustafson, and Gregory McKee Precision agriculture has been practiced since the early 1990s, but the adoption rate of this technology has been slower than experts had predicted. This study explores the role of public- and private-sector financial assistance in the adoption of variable-rate fertilizer application. Public- and private-sector financial assistance are modeled to show the marginal impacts of changes in the traditional flow of government assistance, sales consultant visits, and financial risk. Results indicate that deviation from traditional Aone stop shopping@ has a negative and significant impact on the adoption of alternative fertilizer application technology. However, sales consultant visits, in conjunction with conservation and environmental quality incentive programs and the availability of financing opportunities, significantly favor the adoption of variable-rate fertilizer application. Changes in business risk produced opposite movements in financial risk to facilitate increased adoption of variable-rate fertilizer application technologies. Key words: financing opportunities, multinomial logit model, risk balancing, variable-rate fertilizer application"Cooperative Risk Management, Rationale, and Effectiveness: The Case of Dairy Cooperatives" authored by Mark R. Manfredo and Timothy J. Richards Numerical simulation of several typical risk management strategies using pro forma financial statements from representative U.S. dairy cooperatives shows that combinations of forwards, swaps, and cash marketing strategies for output (cheese), along with various forward contracts offered to cooperative members to manage the variability of milk revenues, have the potential to improve cooperative-, and ultimately member-level risk-return performance. Because most cooperatives have limited access to equity capital, effective use of available risk management tools can increase cooperative value by increasing debt capacity, avoiding bankruptcy costs, and preventing the distortion of capital budgeting decisions. Moreover, the offering of risk management tools to individual members as a service may prove valuable in the retention of these members in the cooperative. Key words: cooperative, expected utility, futures, options, risk management, value-at-risk"Evaluating the Effects of Asymmetric Information in a Model of Crop Insurance" authored by Adeyemi Esuola, Michael Hoy, Zahirul Islam, and Calum G. Turvey Asymmetric information in the form of moral hazard and adverse selection can result in sizable program costs for government-provided crop insurance plans. We present a methodology and illustrative simulations to show how these two types of information problems interact in a way to create program costs for the providers of crop insurance. Our methodology allows us to ascertain the relative contributions to program costs of these two sources of asymmetric information. The exercise is useful in pointing out directions for future study seeking ways to improve the design of crop insurance plans. Key words: adverse selection, crop insurance, moral hazard"Evaluating Risk Management Strategies for Pacific Northwest Grain Producers" authored by Larry D. Makus, H. Holly Wang, and Xiaomei Chen A utility maximization model is used to assess alternative risk management portfolios of Pacific Northwest non-irrigated grain producers using three rotational practices. Risk management tools include hedging with wheat futures, yield insurance, two revenue insurance products (with and without price replacement), and government programs under the 2002 Food Security and Rural Investment (FSRI) Act. Government programs account for the primary risk management value of all the analyzed portfolios. The revenue insurance product with price replacement is preferred when available, and yield insurance is preferred over revenue insurance without price replacement. Hedging is not extensively utilized unless government programs are eliminated. Key words: crop insurance, hedging, non-irrigated crops, risk management<top> "Producers’ Preferences for Round Number Prices" authored by Joni M. Klumpp, B. Wade Brorsen, and Kim B. Anderson The purpose of this study was to determine if a preference for round prices exists in the wheat market and how wheat sales react to price movements around whole-dollar amounts. The results show round prices are slightly more prevalent than non round prices, and transactions increase when price moves above a whole-dollar amount. While such predictable behavior could be exploited by speculators in other markets, the effect is not large enough to merit concern in the market studied here. Key words: behavioral finance, round prices, threshold prices, wheat<top>
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