- Mosaic also said soft market conditions drove down second-quarter phosphate sales volumes to about 1.3 million tons for the period ended Nov. 30 -- about 800,000 tons lower than the volume sold in the prior quarter. The company expects third-quarter sales volumes to remain soft, although it expects a strong recovery in the fiscal fourth quarter.
- Potash sales volumes for the second quarter were approximately 1.7 million tonnes down from 1.9 million tonnes in the first quarter. The average selling price was $525 per tonne, below company's forecast range of $560 to $620 per tonne.
- Mosaic also withdrew its fiscal 2009 sales volume guidance for phosphates and potash, citing the "uncertainties in the global economy."
- "Several factors have impacted worldwide crop nutrient demand, including lower grain and oilseed prices, a late North American harvest, congested distribution supply chains, and the unprecedented global economic and credit downturn which has seen business moderate in nearly all sectors," Jim Prokopanko, chief executive officer, said.

This remains one of my favorite long term sectors but seeing such weakening here, reminds me that the only safe area might be those few companies whose sole customer is the US government.
As a side note, the portfolio weightings found in the right margin no longer reflect how we are positioned although I just updated it this weekend; as I said, once we break S&P 840 we have to become bearish again so I adjusted accordingly. One has to be so very nimble in this market as conditions can change dramatically in 4 hours. Of course, like clockwork today we broke right back ABOVE S&P 840... which is worrisome because if this pattern begins again we lose the one thing working: technical analysis. And we return to the early October 2008 scenario where nothing works except throwing darts and guessing. Not that we are too far off from that right now. But in theory once we broke S&P 840, we "should" continue down. I've adjusted the portfolio to take advantage of that scenario.
We're currently at S&P 825 after flirting with 850 just over an hour ago? Volatility remains wicked. With gaming hour (3 PM) not far off this means we could close up at S&P 900 or 800 - who knows. The textbook however, would point downward.
What remains troubling is that the S&P chart mimics Mosaic above - a total inability to break over the 20 day moving average... this is the weakest of resistance areas and even in a typical bear market you retrace back upwards to the 50 day moving average before selling back off. Since late summer we do not even make the attempt on the 50 day moving average and falter at the 20 day... that level of weakness is really telling.
Long Mosaic in fund; no personal position








