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Now this ought to be interesting.
Sums up my thinking earlier this week looking at the pair of super farm retirement auctions this week by Steffes Auctioneers in eastern North Dakota. These two auctions, held Tuesday and Wednesday of this week (November 3 and 4, 2009), featured a ton of very nice late model farm equipment.
I wondered if these auctions may be postponed due to weather. Good weather.
This fall has not been a friendly harvest season across such a wide swath of the country. Wet, wet, wet. So much work getting pushed back further and further. Finally a hopeful window of nice weather comes along mid week, just in time for these two sales.
Would folks be in a buying mood? Would the late model big ticket pieces of equipment potentially sell soft?
Nope.
Turns out both Steffes auctions this week went very, very well. The equipment was in great condition and the sale prices were very strong.
"There was a little apprehension leading up to the auctions," says Brad Olstad of Steffes Auctioneers. "But we decided to stay the course and have the sales. There was an explosion of interest in the trucks for sale. Folks wanted more rolling capacity. We started to get calls from Montana all the way out to Oregon, up into Canada. Canadian buyers were huge. They took advantage of the bounce in the dollar. They came in full force."
Examples of the strong sale prices?
How about the 2001 model JD 9650 Walker combine with 1,376 engine hours sold Tuesday on the sale in east-central North Dakota, it brought $121,000. That's with NO heads. Pretty impressive for an eight-year-old machine.
But the real attention grabber on Tuesday's sale was the 2001 JD 914 pickup platform sold for $12,500. I've seen 99 JD 914s sold at auction going back over the last 13 years. Next highest sale price? It was back in 2003 when one sold for $10,000.
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