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The Elbert Files: Now Is The Time To Sell Farmland
BY DAVE ELBERT , Columnist Friday, August 09, 2013 7:00 AM Iowa’s farm economy is at a tipping point. This won’t be a collapse, like the farm crisis of 30 years ago, when farmland lost 60 percent of its value and many farm families were put off their land. But there are growing signs that the farm economy has peaked. And if it has, the effects will be felt well beyond the farm gate. In recent years, record-high crop prices boosted Iowa’s per capita income growth to levels well above the national average, as well as state income tax collections. “Indeed, it is in the cards” that a decade of growth in farm income is coming to an end, said Neil Harl, Iowa’s premier agricultural expert. “These spikes never last forever,” Harl said last week. “Farmers are the world’s best economic citizens. Give them half an economic incentive, and they increase production every time and drive the price down, and destroy their own economic prosperity.” That is what is happening now. Corn and soybean prices reached record levels for the month of January, but they are now down significantly. Crop prices can, and do, fluctuate during the growing season. But the trend this year is abnormal. In recent years, crop prices have typically increased during the late spring and early summer months, based in part on early flooding and drought fears. Then in late summer and early fall, prices fell when government reports predicted larger-than-expected harvests due to advances in plant genetics, changing weather patterns and other factors. But this year, Iowa’s corn and soybean prices are bucking that trend. Corn prices are down 30 percent from January, while soybeans are down 15 percent. In the past 30 years, there have been only three other times – 1975, 1994 and 1999 – when both corn and soybeans posted double-digit price declines between January and July. In two cases, 1975 and 1994, year-end prices wound up being even lower than the July averages. Those earlier events occurred before significant genetic advances created drought-tolerant and fast-growing crops capable of making up the difference when planting is delayed by spring flooding. No one can predict with certainty what will happen this year, but at this point, it is unlikely that prices will recover to last year’s record levels. If corn and soybean prices remain where they are now, they would chop roughly $4 billion off the value of Iowa crops that sold for more than $20 billion last year. Indeed, current prices are more in line with 2010, which was also a good year for farm income, although not as good as the two years that followed. The problem today – and it’s not a bad problem to have – is that the bar of expectations has been repeatedly raised in recent years. Expectations are a big driver in farmland sales, pushing up land values by leaps and bounds not seen since the years that preceded the 1980s farm crisis. Harl and others say a 1980s-style crash is unlikely for a variety of reasons. But the question remains, have farmland values peaked? “We haven’t seen it yet,” said Steve Bruere, president of Clive-based Peoples Co., a major broker of farm sales. But he added, most farmland sales occur between September and March. “There is still so much money in checking accounts, and land values always lag going down,” Bruere said. Another factor, he said, is “interest rates have jumped about 1 percent.” “Eventually, the combination of lower prices and (higher) interest rates will affect land values,” Bruere said. If you own farmland and want to sell at the peak, now is probably a good time. Read more: http://www.businessr…6#ixzz2cPXNPHGh Continue reading
US Farmland Prices Keep On Rising
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/caa6bdd0-05c0-11e3-ad01-00144feab7de.html#ixzz2cP3tHszb August 15, 2013 By Gregory Meyer in New York Farmland values in a critical US agricultural region continued their rise in spite of weakening crop prices, as low interest rates and a dearth of investment alternatives spur wealthy farmers to amass more acreage, Federal Reserve economists have reported. Irrigated land in states such as Kansas and Nebraska gained 25.2 per cent year on year in the quarter ended June 30, the ninth straight quarter in which annual price rises have topped 20 per cent, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City said in a survey of bankers published on Thursday. The sharp increase in the face of an expected decline in incomes will further stoke debate about whether land prices reflect fundamental farm economics or have been artificially inflated by low interest rates. In a separate survey of a district that includes Illinois and Indiana, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago reported farmland values rose 17 per cent from a year before. But second quarter values were unchanged from the first quarter, in the first flat quarterly results since 2009. The lion’s share of US farmland is still bought and sold by farmers, but it has also attracted large institutional investors such as TIAA-CREF and pension funds. Grain prices fell in the survey period, with hard winter wheat futures down 8 per cent in the year to June 30. Questions about the direction of US biofuels policy also weigh on investors’ minds, said Philippe de Lapérouse of consultant HighQuest Partners. The retreat in crop prices is expected to hit US farm revenues. Equipment maker John Deere forecasts a 6 per cent drop from a record $402.1bn last year to $379.7bn in 2014. The Kansas City Fed said: “Bankers expected income to drop further in the next few months due to the possibility of sharply lower corn and soyabean prices at harvest. Despite lower farm income and expectations of additional declines, farmland values surged further during the second quarter.” The survey found that farmers’ overall wealth levels, as well as “low interest rates and a lack of alternative investment options”, were more important factors behind the boom than expected incomes. To date, concerns about a looming bubble have been answered with the facts that farmers’ debts are low relative to their assets, speculators are in the minority and grain prices are still relatively high. Meanwhile, the average interest rate on farm real estate loans rose slightly to 5.38 per cent in the quarter, its first increase in more than two years in the Kansas City district. “Farm loan repayment rates softened in the second quarter and were expected to weaken in coming months with lower farm income,” the Kansas City Fed said. The Chicago Fed said most bankers envision stable land prices. “The anticipation of lower crop revenues – especially when combined with potentially rising interest rates on farm loans – portended softness in future farmland values,” its survey said. Nationally, farmland has gained 9.4 per cent on average from 2012, the US Department of Agriculture said earlier this month. Continue reading
PropertyInvest.sg Launches Its Brand New Property Website For Property Investment In Singapore
PropertyInvest.sg launches its very own brand new website providing useful information on the residential and commercial properties ready for use or the newly launched projects looking to develop in the near future on property investment in Singapore . Besides property information, the website is certainly a useful resource for anyone seeking information on buying and selling properties in Singapore. The all-encompassing website is a boon for investors far and wide who are looking to derive the latest information on the residential properties in Singapore, one among the most lucrative destinations for investment in property. Some of these residential properties can be categorised as newly launched condominiums, cluster houses, semi-detached and bungalows. Another feature of propertyinvest.sg that is bound to grab the eyeballs of real estate news enthusiasts is its interesting news-ticker that provides the latest updates on property for interested readers. Viewers can read the latest news making headlines on the real estate sector. “Property investors in Singapore require a need to compare properties in great detail before they actually make their first enquiry.” said Shirley Bok, founder of Propertyinvest.sg. “With Propertyinvest.sg, buyers or sellers in Singapore will be able to gain valuable knowledge on the properties in Singapore.” she added. Propertyinvest.sg focuses on residential, commercial, industrial and overseas properties, and offers property comparison services in Singapore. Owing to factors such as convenience of use, quick access of property listings and astute comparison mechanism, the property website has everything to become the one-stop portal for property buyers and sellers in Singapore. Read more: http://www.digitaljo…4#ixzz2cJWk3Xs3 Continue reading