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Fewer U.S. tractor dealerships raise costs for farmers as sector consolidates

By Bianca Flowers

CHICAGO (Reuters) -More farm equipment dealers are going out of business, leaving a handful of companies with control of a large swathe of the market and greater ability to set prices for selling and repairing equipment, according to interviews with farmers, equipment dealers and analysts.

Buyouts of local mom-and-pop dealers have reduced farmers' options for purchasing machinery and repairing aging equipment.

In Montana, a state the size of Germany, only three Deere & Co. dealerships remain compared to around 30 two decades ago, according to the state Farmers Union. Local barley farmer Erik Somerfeld said one dealer network dominates all sales and repairs for rival equipment maker CNH Industrial.

Somerfeld has had to travel out of state to get parts for his equipment when they aren't in stock at his local dealership 25 miles (40 km) from his home.

"The dealership that's 110 miles away normally has anything I want at a lower price," Somerfeld said.

Just two dealer groups, Ag-Pro and Titan Machinery, own the bulk of stores in North America selling farm equipment made by Deere -- the largest U.S. farm equipment maker -- and CNH Industrial, according to Ag-Pro and Titan Machinery websites.

Larger dealers' pursuit of regional dominance began in the 1980s. Merger momentum increased during the COVID-19 pandemic, when supply chain snarls limited parts and labor available and smaller dealers were unable to compete with larger rivals, said John Schmeiser, chief operating officer of the North American Equipment Dealers Association, a trade group.

Fewer dealers to service millions of acres of farmland means U.S. farmers are paying more for equipment and gas at a time they also face higher costs https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/off-charts-chemical-shortages-hit-us-farms-2022-06-27/ of seeds, fertilizer, and other crop care chemicals. Increased costs are threatening their profits and ability to expand plantings next season at a time of growing concern over global food security.

Roughly 65% of farmers in the United States have access to fewer equipment dealerships than they did five years ago, according to a survey https://uspirg.org/feature/usp/deere-headlights-ii conducted in late 2021 by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) and the National Farmers Union, based on interviews with 74 farmers.

For Deere, more than 80% of authorized dealer locations are now part of larger chains, defined as owning seven or more stores, according to the survey and dealership location data analyzed by Reuters. CNH and AGCO Corp have a smaller percentage of their dealerships owned by larger chains -- at 37% for CNH's Case IH brand and 22% for AGCO as of December 2021.