Tag Archives: credit
UK average asking prices up 3.3% month on month, latest index shows
New sellers have helped push up property prices in the UK, with the average asking price seeing a rise of 3.3% or £8,103 last month, according to the latest data from Rightmove. The average property coming to the market is now priced at £251,964, some 6.9% or £16,223 more than a year ago which is the highest annual rate for over six years. The real estate website also reports that new listing numbers jumped by 18% compared to a year ago, but the supply shortage continues as they fail to keep pace with numbers coming off the market. It says that buyers with a property ‘yet to sell’ are the losers as the market heats up, with agents reporting buyers able to proceed with speed are winning the property battle. Also market momentum continues to build with all of Rightmove’s 10 busiest ever days being in January this year, breaking 50 million pages in a day for the first time. ‘The market rebound continues. While February is historically a positive month for prices of property coming to market, this is the second highest February rise since our index began in September 2001,’ said Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst. ‘New sellers are now asking over £16,000 more than those who came to market a year ago, a rate of increase not seen since before the credit crunch took hold in 2008. Those contemplating trading up, down or out may well be encouraged to come to market as they see their equity grow as prices rise,’ he pointed out. The data also shows weekly new listings averaged 27,768 over the last four weeks compared to 23,607 over the same period a year ago, an increase of 18%. While the sizeable year on year uplift is partly explained by a sprinkling of snow around this time last winter, this is the highest weekly run rate at this time of year since 2008. New supply is scarcest in the south where increased demand is greatest. London at 15%, the South East at 13% and the South West at 10% are all below the national average of 18%. Furthermore, even this significant boost in property coming to market is exceeded by the number of properties coming off the market, suggesting that the extra supply is being soaked up by buyer demand, an early indicator that transaction volumes will be considerably higher in 2014 than 2013. As a result there was a slight fall in the average available stock per estate agency branch, from 58 properties to 57. If increased listing levels are maintained, the firm points out, and they start to outstrip buyer demand, upwards price pressure will ease. It will take more than one month of improvements in new listing numbers to bring the market back into balance however, indeed some local market hotspots have not seen any uplift at all. ‘The housing market can only help to support a wider economic recovery if there is… Continue reading
Soaring Farmland Prices A Crisis In The Making: Don Pittis
If you knew there was a very safe Canadian investment that skyrocketed by 20 per cent last year, you’d probably say that was a good thing. But when the thing that’s going up in value is farmland, Christie Young says it’s a crisis in the making. The latest survey by Farm Credit Canada shows the price of farmland in Quebec rose by a staggering 19.4 per cent last year. Nationally, Canadian farmland from coast to coast has risen by an average of 12 per cent a year since 2008. That’s more than five times the rate of inflation. For people who already own farmland, soaring prices are a windfall. But Young, executive director of FarmStart, a group trying to help young farmers get into the business of farming, says Canada is facing a sea change that bodes ill for agriculture. “The average age of farmers is 60 years old across Canada,” says Young. “According to StatsCan data, about 50 per cent of our land assets will be transferred in the next five years. And of the retiring farmers, 75 per cent of them don’t have successors. It’s a transition we’ve never seen before in agriculture. And it’s one we are wholly and completely unprepared for.” FarmStart has two incubator farms in southern Ontario to bring new farmers into the business, but at current prices, Young says there is no way those starting out could earn enough from their farms to make a living and pay their mortgage. Overpriced land It is a problem that Rejean Girard, who farms southwest of Montreal, understands. He bought his small plot of land near Saint-Cesaire 20 years ago. But Girard says the return he gets from the sheep he raises would never pay for that land today. By that measure, he says, the land is overpriced by about three-quarters. The steadily rising price of land has caught the attention of savvy Canadian investors. Global investors have an interest, too, but in most provinces only Canadians are allowed to own farmland. That has created an opportunity for Canadian farmland investment funds like Bonnefield, Agcapita and Assiniobia, which have been assembling blocks of farmland and selling shares to high net worth Canadians. The president of Toronto-based Bonnefield, Tom Eisenhaur, says farmland has been one of the most lucrative and secure investments especially when markets are volatile, and “a better hedge against inflation than gold.” Eisenhaur says he expects the price of land to continue to rise, if not at the same rate as over the past decade. He quotes a United Nations survey that shows world food production will have to double over the next 20 years. “While it’s trite to say, no matter how bad or how good things get in the markets, people still have to eat.” Profits from rising prices While Eisenhaur is profiting from rising prices, he scoffs at the idea that funds like his are responsible for the land boom. He says that while farmers buy and sell some $15 billion worth of land each year in Canada, third-party investors like his company trade a mere $100 million worth. So it seems clear that farmers’ pursuit of more acreage is helping to push up the price of the land. That seems to be in direct conflict with what Girard, Young and many others say about the difficulty of paying for farmland with a farm income. That is, until I speak with Gary Brien who farms near Chatham, Ont.. “The way we’ve looked at it is more of a way of life. It just so happens the land has gone up as we accumulated it over our lifetime,” says Brien. “I really don’t think we own it. We’re just using it while we’re here. The value to us may not be in a dollar value.” Brien says that the last few years, bumper crops have pushed up farm incomes to record levels, so farmers have had cash to spare. And when farmers have money on hand, their non-monetary way of thinking of land, combined with the tax rules, encourages them to put that spare cash into farmland, whatever the price. “Farmers don’t like paying income tax,” says Brien. “And if they get a bunch of money and have a choice to pay income tax, or buy more land, they buy more land.” Bigger and bigger That tends to mean existing farms are getting bigger and bigger, able to take advantage of the efficiencies of expensive modern farm machinery and make the money to buy more land. But that doesn’t help the farmers who are just starting out small, without inherited family land and little prospect of paying off a mortgage, even if they could get one. “We have farmers in rural areas paying far over the productive value of the land that they are buying because they have the income or there are such scarce land resources that they’ll pay anything,” says Young. “For a new entrant looking at that landscape, it is almost impossible to conceive of buying a farm.” Continue reading
Farmland Values and Credit Conditions
AUGUST 21, 2013 By: News Release CHICAGO–Acording to the latest AgLetter published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, for the second quarter of 2013, “good” farmland values were up 17 percent from a year ago in the Seventh Federal Reserve District, which consists of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin. However, agricultural land values registered no gain in the second quarter relative to the first quarter of 2013, according to a survey of 211 agricultural bankers. The last time there was no quarterly increase in agricultural land values was in 2009. Generally, the stellar year-over-year gains in farmland values across the five District states masked the comparative weakness of the quarterly results. Moreover, the percentage of survey respondents anticipating farmland values to fall during the third quarter of 2013 was the same as the percentage predicting them to rise (7 percent); 86 percent of responding bankers expected farmland values to be stable. The District’s agricultural credit conditions were generally better in the second quarter of 2013 than a year earlier. The availability of funds for lending by agricultural banks was up relative to a year ago; the banks’ deposits were enhanced not only by high crop prices but also by payments for insured losses due to last year’s drought. Repayment rates for non-real-estate farm loans were higher than a year ago, with 94 percent of the respondents’ agricultural loan portfolio having no significant repayment problems. Renewals and extensions of non-real-estate farm loans declined from the level of a year earlier. The responding bankers perceived that non-real-estate loan demand for the April through June period of 2013 was below that for the same period last year. For the second quarter of 2013, the District’s average loan-to-deposit ratio edged up to 64.6 percent—12.6 percentage points below the average level desired by survey respondents. Finally, interest rates on farm loans rose for the first time since early 2011. Looking forward Crop producers will face tighter cash flows as their revenues decline (especially if crop prices slide further). Yet, the responding bankers did not expect agricultural loan volumes to rise for the July through September period of 2013 relative to the same period last year. In fact, some categories, including operating loans and livestock loans, were anticipated to shrink in the third quarter of 2013 relative to their levels in the same quarter of 2012, according to the survey respondents. Falling crop prices should bring relief to livestock producers, whose profits have suffered on account of the high feed costs in recent years. Continue reading