Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

Monsanto won’t sell Precision Planting to John Deere

Deere surprised, disappointed with decision

By Brian Hess

Farms.com

Monsanto has rejected the sale of its Precision Planting division to John Deere.

Precision Planting is an agricultural technology company that produces such items as Keaton Seed Firmers and the 20/20 SeedSense.

“We just didn't see that there was a clear path going forward. We have a valuable business and people in limbo and it was just time to move on,” Michael Stern, CEO of Climate Corporation, a division of Monsanto, said yesterday in a release.

The company is still interested in selling to another buyer with a vision similar to Monsanto’s. Other parties have shown significant interest, Stern said.

 Koele/iStock/Getty Images Plus

The news seemed to have come as a surprise to Deere. “We are deeply disappointed in this outcome as we remain confident the acquisition would have benefited customers,” the company stated in response to the announcement by Monsanto.

The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) called the decision to cancel the proposed sale "a victory for American farmers and consumers."

In May 2015 these two ag superpowers announced their deal for Precision Planting but the news was immediately unpopular in the United States. Some Americans argued that the deal would result in more expensive technology.

The DOJ filed a lawsuit to block the purchase late last summer, only months after the proposed takeover was announced. 


Trending Video

Reducing Nursery Feed Costs Without Losing Performance - Dr. Julian Arroyave

Video: Reducing Nursery Feed Costs Without Losing Performance - Dr. Julian Arroyave


In this episode of The Swine Nutrition Blackbelt Podcast, Dr. Julian Arroyave, a research swine nutritionist at Carthage Innovative Swine Solutions, discusses nursery feed budget strategies designed to reduce costs without compromising pig performance. He explains trials comparing high, medium, and low phase 1 and phase 2 feed budgets, including commercial validation data showing improved income over feed cost when lower-budget programs were applied under healthy herd conditions. Listen now on all major platforms!

Click here to read the full research article: https://academic.oup.com/tas/article/...

"Results showed that the low-budget program increased income over feed cost by $1.48 per pig."

Meet the guest: Dr. Julian Arroyave / julian-arroyave-jaramillo-638740129 is a research swine nutritionist at Carthage Innovative Swine Solutions, with experience in nursery nutrition, diet formulation, and commercial research trials. He completed his PhD at Kansas State University and previously worked as a nutrition supervisor at Kekén in Mexico. His work focuses on nutritional strategies that improve production efficiency while controlling feed costs. Learn more from Dr. Julian Arroyave Jaramillo on The Swine Nutrition Blackbelt Podcast, available on all major platforms.