![](/profile/get-photo.asp?memberid=22135&type=profile&rnd=50) 20 Miles West of Indianapolis Indiana | Take this with a grain of salt since I do not have my own spread g equipment either, but seems markup is markup, regardless of price of grain. $70-120 a ton seems to catch a lot of the retail dry Fert markups. I suppose if demand is low it may sway towards that $70 range and if demand is high it may sway to that higher range perhaps?
But markup is there every year IMO. As Weedman as eluded to though, it doesn't mean you'll be buying the material at the right time. Just like the stock or grain markets, everyone could make big money if they always bought at the low and sold at the high... |