NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has launched an antitrust investigation into fertilizer pricing practices, a move closely watched by farmers facing elevated input costs ahead of planting season.
According to reporting by Bloomberg, the DOJ’s Antitrust Division is examining whether major producers — Nutrien, Mosaic, CF Industries, Koch Industries, and Yara International — colluded to raise prices on U.S. farmers. Together, the firms represent a dominant share of nitrogen, phosphate, and potash supply in the United States.
Farm organizations have raised concerns about fertilizer market concentration for years, and industry pressure has intensified recently as margins tighten across crop agriculture. USDA Deputy Secretary Stephen Vaden earlier described Nutrien and Mosaic as a “duopoly,” while groups including the Texas Corn Producers Association and Iowa Corn Growers Association have urged federal regulators to review pricing practices.
For producers entering the spring planting season, fertilizer costs remain a key financial pressure even as commodity prices soften. The investigation could shape future input pricing and competition depending on its findings.
Join us again on Monday for the latest agriculture, policy, and business news, starting at 8:00 AM ET on RFD Network’s Market Day Report, Cow Guy Close, and Rural Evening News.
New research shows that most farmers do not have a formal resiliency plan in place. Devin Fuhrman highlights how Nationwide’s Farm Risk Ready initiative supports farmers in building stronger, more resilient operations.
March 06, 2026 01:59 PM
·
The American Coalition for Ethanol reacts as the Farm Bill heads to a full House vote — while ethanol expansion, including year-round E15, is left out — as well as the USDA’s pursuit of global markets for ethanol.
March 06, 2026 01:45 PM
·
Big oils-and-fats volumes can support crush demand, but fuel markets can quickly tighten supplies.
March 06, 2026 12:57 PM
·
Mexican livestock officials are emphasizing surveillance and inspection systems to preserve access to the U.S. cattle export market. Texas’ Bovina Feeders explains the rising stakes as the border stays closed.
March 06, 2026 11:32 AM
·
Weak crop margins and tariff uncertainty are delaying machinery purchases and signaling slower capital investment across U.S. agriculture.
March 05, 2026 02:04 PM
·
Farm Bureau Economist Dr. Faith Parum explains the role farm safety net programs play in supporting farm finances as growers head into the 2026 planting season.
March 05, 2026 01:16 PM
·