How to Hedge Your Portfolio Against Skyrocketing Food Prices

by Fred Fuld III

Did you know that fertilizer prices spiked in the U.S. market in late 2021, just ahead of 2022 planting season, according to the United States Department of Agriculture? This was before Russia invaded Ukraine.

US Fertilizer Prices

Now, because of the Russian / Ukraine War, prices will continue to rise, since Russia produces almost ten million metric tons of nitrogen fertilizer per year, the fourth largest producer in the world.

Higher Fertilizer Prices

With higher fertilizer prices, you get higher, wheat, corn, and soybean prices. With higher wheat, corn, and soybean prices, you get higher food prices in general. And you can also get food shortages as well.

Higher Food Prices

I recently wrote about the soaring prices of items on Amazon, called The Amazon Inflation Rate is Running at 68% Per Year, and showed that many of these increases were due to food items. I described how dark chocolate candy rose by 148%, light tuna in water by 28%, multi-seed cheesy garlic crackers by 194%, sesame bars with honey and almonds by 134%, and on and on. This was all during a twelve month period ending last November, and remember, this was before the war.

So what is an investor to do?

If you are willing to take a lot of risk, you can trade the futures market. But for those that prefer to stick with stocks and ETFs, there are still opportunities.

Individual Agricultural Funds

One way is by buying agricultural commodities exchange traded funds. There are ETFs and ETNs available for corn, wheat, soybeans, and several other ag products.

The Teucrium Corn Fund (CORN), which invests in corn futures, has a market cap of $222 million, an expense ratio of 1.76%, and is up 29.79% year to date.

The Teucrium Wheat Fund (WEAT) has net assets of $493 million. It has an expense ratio of 1.00%, and year-to-date is up 38%.

The Teucrium Soybean Fund (SOYB) has a market cap of $64 million, an expense ratio of 1.16%, and is up 21.18% year to date.

Diversified Agricultural Funds

If you prefer to reduce your risk through diversification, you might want to consider Invesco DB Agriculture Fund (DBA), which invests in a basket of agricultural commodities futures. The market cap is $1.85 billion, the expense ratio is 0.85%, and the year-to-date total return is 11.2%.

Another diversified investment is the Elements Rogers International Commodity Index-Agriculture Total Return ETN (RJA), which is up 17.98% so far this year. The market cap is $153 million and the expense ratio is 0.75%.

Most of these funds are very volatile, very speculative, and can have low volume and very wide spreads.

Maybe one of these will help you offset the prices you pay at the supermarket.

Disclosure: Author didn’t own any of the above at the time the article was written but plans to put on a bullish option spread on CORN in the next few days.

 

 

 

How to Trade Agricultural Commodities without Trading Futures

by Fred Fuld III

Have you ever thought about trading or investing in an agricultural commodity, possibly as an inflation hedge, such as  wheat, corn, soybeans, or even coffee?

But maybe you didn’t want to get into futures because of the risk or lack of understanding or both.

Well, there is another way to trade these food items, and that is through the agricultural commodities exchange traded funds.

Probably the safest way is through an ETF that has a diversified portfolio of agricultural products, such as the Invesco DB Agriculture Fund (DBA), which has an investment objective of investing in a portfolio of exchange-traded agricultural futures.

If you think the price of corn is going to take off, you could trade the Teucrium Corn Fund (CORN).

Or maybe you think the demand for sugar is going to increase, causing the sugar price to spike. You have a couple of alternatives, the iPath Series B Bloomberg Sugar Subindex Total Return ETN (SGG) and the Teucrium Sugar Fund (CANE).

If you like chocolate, there is the iPath Bloomberg Cocoa Subindex Total Return ETN (NIB).

The following is a list of the agricultural commodities ETFs.

Commodity Symbol ETF Name  Total Assets*
Agriculture DBA Invesco DB Agriculture Fund  1,018,170
Agriculture RJA Elements Rogers International Commodity Index-Agriculture Total Return ETN  153,758
Corn CORN Teucrium Corn Fund  120,848
Coffee JO iPath Series B Bloomberg Coffee Subindex Total Return ETN  94,895
Wheat WEAT Teucrium Wheat Fund  75,645
Soybean SOYB Teucrium Soybean Fund  44,971
Sugar SGG iPath Series B Bloomberg Sugar Subindex Total Return ETN  26,419
Sugar CANE Teucrium Sugar Fund  22,844
Cocoa NIB iPath Bloomberg Cocoa Subindex Total Return ETN  22,713
Grains JJG iPath Series B Bloomberg Grains Subindex Total Return ETN  21,563
Cotton BAL iPath Series B Bloomberg Cotton Subindex Total Return ETN  20,602
Livestock COW iPath Series B Bloomberg Livestock Subindex Total Return ETN  19,665
Agriculture TAGS Teucrium Agricultural Fund  14,180
Agriculture JJA iPath Series B Bloomberg Agriculture Subindex Total Return ETN  11,211
* In thousands

You will notice that some of these are ETNs (Exchange Traded Notes) as opposed to ETFs. ETNs are senior, unsecured debt securities similar to a bond

Keep in mind that these funds are very volatile, very speculative, and can have low volume and very wide spreads.

 

Disclosure: Author is long JO and WEAT.