Producers Prioritizing Balance Sheets Over New Spending, Machinery Investment

Farmer Bridge payments are being used primarily to reduce debt and protect cash flow, not drive new spending. Curt Blades with the Association of Equipment Manufacturers joined us to provide insight into the ag equipment market and the factors influencing sales.

DES MOINES, IOWA (RFD News) — Farmers receiving payments from the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program are far more likely to shore up finances than expand spending, according to analysis from Wesley Davis, chief ag economist and partner at Meridian Ag Advisors. Recent commentary has suggested the aid could fuel equipment upgrades or higher input use, but current data point in a different direction.

Survey results show roughly 78 percent of farmers plan to use payments to pay down debt or strengthen working capital rather than invest in machinery. That signals a defensive posture as producers manage tight margins, higher interest costs, and lingering balance-sheet stress after multiple difficult years.

Additional data reinforce that caution. The share of farmers planning to sell mid- and long-term assets is climbing toward levels last seen during the 2017–2019 downturn. Asset sales are being used to reduce leverage, rebuild liquidity, and improve cash flow heading into the 2026 production season.

While some operations will still invest in equipment or inputs where returns justify it, Davis notes the broader trend reflects risk management, not expansion. For many farms, survival and financial stability remain the priority.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Farmer Bridge payments are being used primarily to reduce debt and protect cash flow, not drive new spending.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Specialist

U.S. tractor sales are down 20 percent compared to this time last year, with combine purchases seeing an even steeper decline, raising questions about the outlook for the agricultural machinery market in the year ahead.

Curt Blades with the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) joined us on Thursday’s Market Day Report to discuss the latest trends and what is driving the slowdown in ag equipment sales.

In his interview with RFD News, Blades outlined the current state of tractor and combine sales and explained how the farm economy is influencing purchasing decisions. He also discussed supply and demand dynamics in the ag equipment sector, shared his expectations for the industry as it enters the new year, and addressed broader market factors that could affect farmers and the agricultural equipment sector as a whole, noting that economic conditions may shape equipment demand going forward.

Related Stories
Rural population growth supports long-term stability of the ag workforce.
Farm Credit’s Christy Seyfert joined us to discuss the ag industry’s push for swift Farm Bill action as it heads toward a House vote.
Bridge payments are helping, but many producers still face losses and tight margins. AEM’s Curt Blades joins us to discuss how the current farm economy is pressuring equipment demand.
Feed demand and premiums drive growth for the crop
Record auction prices accompany more than $1.4 million in scholarships for young exhibitors in Mississippi.
Purdue economist Dr. Joana Colussi discussed the U.S. and Brazil’s reliance on imported fertilizers and their impact on global food security amid rising input costs.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Author Lee Klancher joined RFD-TV’s Market Day Report to discuss a new, special edition version of his book, “Farmall Century” hitting the shelves in honor of the iconic tractor’s major milestone and impact on the ag industry over the last century.
In today’s production update, Total Acre Farming’s David Hula has an enlightening conversation with Jeremy Rountree about a new, industry-disrupting product from Brandt Fungicide.
What are the relative advantages and disadvantages of the split-interest transaction? And what are the rules when property that was acquired in a split-interest transaction is sold? That is the topic of today’s blog post by RFD-TV Agri-Legal Expert Roger McEowen.
A story that started with hardship ultimately led to a producer impacting the lives of youth involved in sheep showing. The North Carolina Farm Bureau takes us to Haynes Farm in Dobson, N.C., to hear this inspiring story.
Show producer Donna Sanders shares her perspective on filming the latest episode of Where the Food Comes From at Splenda Stevia Farms, a company growing a sweet specialty crop here in the U.S. that is typically imported from overseas.
A split-interest transaction involves one party acquiring a temporary interest in the asset (such as a term certain or life estate), with the other party acquiring a remainder interest. That is the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV Agrilegal Expert Roger A. McEowen.