Farmer sentiment dropped sharply to start 2026, reflecting growing economic concerns across U.S. agriculture. But beyond the headline decline in the Purdue/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer, this episode focuses on what the shift signals for farm financial stress, investment decisions, and risk management in the year ahead.
In this Purdue Commercial AgCast episode, Michael Langemeier reviews the January survey results and explains the forces behind the drop in producer sentiment. Financial pressure appears to be building, as more producers report tighter cash flow, increased operating loan needs, and a growing share of loans tied to unpaid carryover debt. At the same time, machinery investment plans are slowing, and more farmers expect challenging conditions for U.S. agriculture over the next five years.
Export concerns—especially related to soybean competitiveness with Brazil—also weighed on expectations. While short-term farmland value expectations remain steady, strong land values are supporting balance sheets even as margins stay tight due to high input costs and lower output prices. The episode highlights the contrast between stable asset values and stressed cash flow, a key theme shaping the farm financial outlook.
This discussion goes beyond the numbers to focus on the implications for farm businesses and what producers should be watching as 2026 unfolds.
Full Ag Economy Barometer report: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agbarometer 
 
The Ag Economy Barometer sentiment index is calculated each month from 400 U.S. agricultural producers’ responses to a telephone survey.
For farm management content, visit: https://purdue.ag/commercialag
Subscribe to audio: https://purdue.ag/agcast 
Socials: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg,  https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg 
#Purdue #AgBarometer #FarmManagement #FarmEconomy #AgOutlook

Purdue Commercial AgCast

Purdue Center for Commercial Agriculture

Farmer Sentiment Drops Sharply — What It Signals for Farm Finances in 2026

FEB 3, 202614 MIN
Purdue Commercial AgCast

Farmer Sentiment Drops Sharply — What It Signals for Farm Finances in 2026

FEB 3, 202614 MIN

Description

Farmer sentiment dropped sharply to start 2026, reflecting growing economic concerns across U.S. agriculture. But beyond the headline decline in the Purdue/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer, this episode focuses on what the shift signals for farm financial stress, investment decisions, and risk management in the year ahead. In this Purdue Commercial AgCast episode, Michael Langemeier reviews the January survey results and explains the forces behind the drop in producer sentiment. Financial pressure appears to be building, as more producers report tighter cash flow, increased operating loan needs, and a growing share of loans tied to unpaid carryover debt. At the same time, machinery investment plans are slowing, and more farmers expect challenging conditions for U.S. agriculture over the next five years. Export concerns—especially related to soybean competitiveness with Brazil—also weighed on expectations. While short-term farmland value expectations remain steady, strong land values are supporting balance sheets even as margins stay tight due to high input costs and lower output prices. The episode highlights the contrast between stable asset values and stressed cash flow, a key theme shaping the farm financial outlook. This discussion goes beyond the numbers to focus on the implications for farm businesses and what producers should be watching as 2026 unfolds. Full Ag Economy Barometer report: 👉 https://purdue.ag/agbarometer   The Ag Economy Barometer sentiment index is calculated each month from 400 U.S. agricultural producers’ responses to a telephone survey. For farm management content, visit: https://purdue.ag/commercialag Subscribe to audio: https://purdue.ag/agcast Socials: https://twitter.com/PUCommercialAg,  https://www.facebook.com/PUCommercialAg #Purdue #AgBarometer #FarmManagement #FarmEconomy #AgOutlook