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How Bad Will The Financial Pinch Be In 2014?

Stu Ellis, FarmGate blog  |   October 16, 2013   Corn Harvest Corn and soybean yields this fall are about as good as the 2012 yields were bad. Despite the challenging weather that delayed planting and then later put corn and soybeans in moisture stress, many fields are recording exceptional yields.  Although two successive years should not be chosen to either determine a trend or calculate an average, the 2012 and 2013 crops are certainly representative of the long term averages. But what will happen when the other shoe drops? If 2014 returns to an average yield, farmers could be hurting financially, particularly if they agree to higher cash rents in the coming weeks. We are in the annual farm leasing season and many landowners are going to want to see more revenue to reflect the higher value of their farmland. Farm operators who agree to that may have difficulty making the necessary cash rent payments based on expected prices and trend yields for 2014. One only has to look at futures prices at the CME’s Board of Trade to pencil out revenue.  With the 2013 production of 14 billion bushels of corn, it is easy to see that the spring guarantee for crop insurance on the 2014 crop will be about $4.50 per bushel.  And although we are 6 months away from planting the 2014 crop, the market is only willing to pay about $4.80 per bushel for the crop produced next year.  That will go up or down, depending on the level of production, but that has to be considered a median price given the expected 2 billion bushel surplus left from the 2013 crop. It is easy to see the $7 and $8 corn prices from the 2012 drought are history. But even if a drought crop occurred in 2014, the 2013 surplus will not allow prices to climb very high.  In fact, University of Illinois agricultural economist Gary Schnitkey says a 125 bushel yield next year will not even generate a $400 per acre return to the operator and land, even with a $6 harvest price and a $200 crop insurance payment.  According to his calculations, even a high yield crop of 220 bushels per acre will still not return more than $300 per acre to the operator and land. His numbers are based on a $537 per acre cost for inputs, such as seed, fertilizer, chemicals, and fuel; everything but cash rent.  And his concerns for the profitability of farmers for the 2013 and 2014 crops are focused on the rate of cash rent that farmers accept. With a return to land and operator, ranging from $275 to $391 depending on yield, there is not much left for the operator’s family living cost after cash rent is paid.  And in many cases, there will be insufficient crop revenue in 2014 to cover cash rents in the $350 to $450 range. As farmers begin to pencil out budgets for 2014, one of the priorities will be what they can afford to pay for cash rent.  While the Schnitkey numbers suggest that cash rents should decline if farmers want to remain in the black that may not be what the majority plans to do. Doane Agricultural Services of St. Louis recently surveyed farm operators and found 48 percent have agreed to 2014 cash rents higher than what they paid in 2013.  Only 14 percent reported that rents declined.  The balance of 38 percent saw rent stability, despite owner desires to raise the rent in the coming year. When competition for farmland fuels the fire in one’s belly, the result could be a serious case of financial indigestion. Summary: Farm profitability in the coming year could be challenged with low returns to operator and land, in the wake of low commodity prices, regardless of yield.  Whether yields are exceptional or drought reduced farm revenue may not be able to meet current cash rent obligations, and much less any increased rent for the 2014 crop year. Source: FarmGate blog Continue reading

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Global Farmland Offers Potential For Asset Deals

As the world’s population swells beyond seven billion and emerging markets’ appetite for food grows, Canadian institutions are getting increasingly hungry for agribusiness and farmland acquisitions abroad. Canada’s pension funds have long been putting their money into mining, energy and infrastructure, and more recently luxury retail brands, but now many are snapping up swathes of arable land or creating special investment vehicles to explore opportunities in agriculture. “We’ve seen this uptick in interest in investing in agricultural assets, and, I think the growing importance of food production overall in the world,” says Grant Jameson, who heads up the Canadian agribusiness practice at Norton Rose Fulbright. Canadian institutions, tired of the lacklustre returns in the market, are seeking options with better yields than gold and government bonds, such as agriculture, experts say. As the global standard of living rises, so too does consumer desire for different and fresher types of food, says Jeff Barnes, a partner at Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Toronto. “As people get more flush, one of the small luxuries is to look a little wider for their food. And that’s going to feed agribusiness.” This year, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board launched its agriculture investment program, and made its first direct farmland investment in a portfolio of U.S. farmland. “These assets have historically delivered stable risk-adjusted returns but, more importantly, the outlook in the global agricultural market in the coming decades is positive due to increasing demand for a wide variety of agricultural products as populations and incomes rise in emerging economies,” CPP’s 2013 annual report states. CPP’s initial focus will be the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, it added. Meanwhile, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Fund at the beginning of this year created a “natural resources” investment asset class. Teachers says it will look for “new opportunities in oil and gas and agriculture.” Last year, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and British Columbia Investment Management Corp. joined with U.S. financial services company TIAA-CREF to create a global agriculture investment vehicle, with $2-billion earmarked to buy farmland in the U.S., Australia and Brazil. In 2011, Alberta Investment Management Corp (AIMCo), joined a forestry management firm in a $415-million acquisition of Australian timberlands — options for which chief executive Leo de Bever said included reverting it to agriculture. Farmland, with its steadily rising prices, is a tantalizing investment option – and one that provides interim income by leasing it to agricultural operations, says Mr. Barnes. “From the point of view of the investor, you are buying the land and you’re leasing it back to a farmer so you’re getting current yield,” he says. “The long-term bet is that this is an asset that people believe will be extraordinary in terms of how much it increases in value.” Canadian farmland values have risen steadily over the last decade, according to Farm Credit Canada, but spiked last year. During the second half of 2012, prices on average rose 10%, which is the highest since the organization began tracking farmland prices in 1985. The cost of farmland across the country in 2013 is at record highs, according to real estate firm RE/MAX, with low inventory pushing up supply in 15 out of the 17 rural markets it tracks. The greatest upswings were in Saskatchewan and Alberta. For example, the price per acre in east central Saskatchewan was $850-$2,500 in 2013, up from $650-$1,250 just two years earlier, RE/MAX said. The price hikes in southwestern Ontario have been particularly steep, according to farmland appraiser Valco. The average rate of increase over 10 counties has been roughly 25% per year since 2010. Land can cost upwards of $15,000 per acre. Farmland values across the globe between 2002 and 2010 have risen up to 1,800%, according to the Global Farmland Index compiled by U.K.-based real estate firm Savil. The biggest upswings have been in emerging markets, such as Romania and Hungary, it said. But the fact that prices have escalated so rapidly is a problem for potential investors, says AIMCo’s Mr. de Bever. He wonders whether the investment potential for farmland has run its course. He explains that the rationale for investing in land is that, with rising demand for protein in the Far East, existing landstock will become more valuable. Yet he points out that land values operate on a long cycle, and that the recent run up in value has been compressed into a short timeframe. “It’s not clear to me that any increase in farm prices is going to be rewarded with an appropriate return.” Still, Mr. de Bever says AIMCO, and other investors, will keep an eye out for farmland acquisitions — albeit a cautious one. “My guess is that there is still going to be quite a bit of demand. My concern is that I would be very picky and make sure that you’re buying right.” Mr. Barnes expects Saskatchewan to remain attractive, where land parcels are larger and the prices are a bit better. Australia remains attractive too, given the similarity in governing structures, compared to places with more instability such as Africa, he says. Other factors that will influence future demand include the trend of using technology to convert unsuitable land into arable land, in parts of South America, Mr. de Bever says. Some parts of Africa will emerge as better investment possibilities once they stabilize politically. “It is one of the areas where you will for the next while see a lot of growth,” Mr. Barnes says. “Whether it will be ticked with pluses and minuses, I don’t know. But it’s certainly an area that is very much in the front of peoples’ minds, especially since other hard commodities like metals are not so much in the front of their mind right now.” Financial Post Continue reading

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The Importance Of Oud

Sustainable Asset Management and Greenstone Equity Partners have teamed up with speciality plantation operator Asia Plantation Capital to bring agro-forestry and Oud bearing Aquilaria plantations as serious project opportunities to institutional investors in the Middle East North Africa (MENA) region, whilst simultaneously working to help preserve the increasingly rare Aquilaria tree in the wild. The traditional use of Oud as an incense in the Gulf region is well known. This valuable oil is renowned for its pleasant and distinctive odour. Over generations Oud has been embodied into local culture as a sign of hospitality and generosity to family, guests and dignitaries. As a result of this demand, Oud and agarwood have become rare in the wild. Future supplies have only been safeguarded by both international legislation, with CITES protecting the rare Aquilaria species in the wild, and by the actions of specialist forestry companies such as Asia Plantation Capital (APC) who have created sustainable tree plantations and invested in modern distilling techniques to ensure future farmed Oud and Agarwood supplies. Aquilaria trees require very specific growing conditions and when infected by particular fungi yield the precious agarwood, from which Oud is derived. In nature this occurs in fewer than five trees per hundred, but with modern forestry practices and following extensive scientific research, several methods have now been discovered to inoculate these trees and induce agarwood in virtually the whole crop. This has allowed innovative companies such as APC, who use an organic inoculation method, to develop a good number of small-scale forestry plantations across Thailand, Sri Lanka and other South East Asian countries where Aquilaria trees have been grown for a number of years and continue to be planted. Mark Wills, Managing Director at Sustainable Asset Management (SAM), explains that “these plantations help balance the supply & demand, reducing pressure for illegal logging and the environmentally damaging cutting of wild Aquilaria in search for wild agarwood.” The size and nature of each Aquilaria plantation is of key importance for the crop and for the local community. APC plantations are classed as agro-forestry as the land has dual uses in the early years of the Aquilaria trees’ life. By grouping plantations in regions, and growing secondary crops such as teak, bamboo, banana and other foods, these plantations create many jobs for local communities and become a centre for the processing of agarwood and Oud oil; which are labour intensive and rewarding activities for local community groups. APC has used agarwood as a social instrument to help revitalise communities in rural areas in this region. APC is a vertically integrated business; social forestry is their passion and they recognised early on that value retention comes from selling the end product through to the market and developing new products and brands for their produce. Today APC is using agarwood and Oud as traditional products for the Gulf communities, as well as in a variety of products that appeal to Western and Eastern consumers’ alike; from fragrances used at Fragrance du Bois, through luxurious cosmetic products, to nutritional supplements, improved rice and even in traditional medicinal applications. Of course, there remains Oud oil. APC and Sustainable Asset Management place great emotional value on the traditional uses of Oud and have been honoured by the recognition of their dedication from both Gulf based investors and now by Greenstone Equity Partners, looking to participate in what has become a partnership for social action and culture preservation. Omar Al-Gharabally, Managing Director at Greenstone Equity Partners comments “when we recognised the quality of Sustainable Asset Management’s Oud, and heard of the dedication and forestry expertise within APC, we knew that we would welcome a commercial relationship. The careful due diligence we have conducted highlights not only the environmental and cultural positives of this project but also the financial rewards.” Continue reading

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