Farm cash receipts rise in first half of 2025 on livestock gains

Crop receipts roughly level, direct payments fall on reduced crop insurance

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Farm cash receipts in the first half of the year were up 3.3 per cent over the same period last year, buoyed by livestock receipts.

Overall receipts between January and June totalled $49.6 billion, up $1.6 billion from the same period last year, Statistics Canada reported on Friday.

Lower crop insurance payments drove a decline in direct payments. Total direct payments dropped by $584.5 million (20 per cent), led by declines in payouts in Saskatchewan and Alberta.

Prices drive livestock receipts surge

Receipts for livestock rose by $2.1 billion to $21.3 billion in the first two quarters — a 10.8 per cent gain. Higher prices for all livestock except poultry drove the surge.

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Cattle receipts were up by $1.2 billion (20.3 per cent) despite a 3.1 per cent decline in marketings, on high cattle prices. Hog receipts rose $436.4 million (10.5 per cent) compared to the same period in 2024 due to strong international demand for pork products, StatCan said.

Supply-managed receipts grew 2.7 per cent to $7.7 billion largely due to a $184.8 million increase in dairy receipts. Turkey receipts fell by $39.6 million due to a reduction in national quota.

Crop receipts steady

Crop receipts were relatively similar to last year at $25.9 billion — a 0.3 per cent rise. For most crops, receipts rose but these were offset by reduced receipts for barley and lower liquidations of deferred crop sales in the West, StatCan said.

Soybean receipts rose by $103.2 million and canola receipts gained $76.4 per cent on higher marketings.

Cereal and grain receipts rose on higher durum receipts — up 197.2 million. Wheat, excluding durum, rose by $122.9 million.

“For most grain crops, higher marketings drove the rise in receipts while lower prices moderated gains,” StatCan said.

Barley receipts fell by $110.1 million as prices and marketings declined.

About the author

Geralyn Wichers

Geralyn Wichers

Reporter

Geralyn Wichers grew up on a hobby farm near Anola, Manitoba, where her family raised cattle, pigs and chickens. Geralyn graduated from Red River College’s Creative Communications program in 2019 and was previously a reporter for The Carillon in Steinbach. Geralyn is also a published author of science fiction and fantasy novels.

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