John PedersenJohn Pedersen, Poultry & Egg Fax, 52 Arbor Way, Newnan, GA 30265, Phone (770) 683-6405From the AuthorHomeGrain prices having little impact on meat suppliesCombined per capita meat supplies these next few quarters will be greater than in the year earlier.HomeReduced meat supplies expected by early 2009Demand may be easing now as record high prices take their toll on the consumers' pocketbooks.HomeCorn acreage headed upSeasonal factors contribute to prices of agricultural food productsHomeStable or lower prices by the end of 2008Common sense and past experiences dictate things will get betterHomeElection year helps but prices will still struggleMost consumers will continue to purchase the food products they want, but in a conservative way.HomeDespite industry shortages: more poultry meat on consumer plattersRecord agriculture product values have shaken the world's consumers.HomeBy the numbers: price shocks nothing new2006 ended with the second-highest corn price in the last 40 years, but this isn't the first time there has been a price shock in the poultry industry.HomeBy the numbers: broiler egg sets show small declineConsumers continue to benefit from excess meat supply as production is up and exports are soft.HomeBy the numbers: chicken producers lead with restraintPer capita meat supply is expected to ease lower, led by the chicken industry and pork producers.HomeBy the numbers: too much meat, too little cornToo much meat is chasing the consumer’s inflated dollar at a time when the U.S. economy is growing at a slower pace.HomeRTC prices drop along with input costsLess meat production is expected by all animal and poultry industries in first six months of next year.HomeHigh costs, huge supply cause economic griefMany companies decided demand was not what they expected, so egg sets took a downward turn to reduce supply. U.S. broiler supply should decline from the fourth quarter on until profits return.Page 1 of 2Next Page