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Farmland For Sale Falls By A Massive 67% – As Prices Rise
By Exeter Express and Echo | Posted: October 25, 2013 The value of farmland in the South West continues to rise, as the amount coming onto the market goes on falling. In the first nine months of this year the price of prime land in the region rose by 2% to £7,600 an acre – according to data collected for the farmland value survey run by estate agents Savills. Penny Dart, of Savills’ Exeter office, explained: “Across the South West during the first three-quarters of 2013 the volume of farmland publicly marketed decreased by 4% when compared to the same period in 2012. “The South West accounted for 18% of all farmland marketed in England. In the region 15,081 acres of farmland was publicly marketed, compared with 15,745 acres to the end of September in 2012, a decrease of 4%.” Mrs Dart said Somerset recorded the steepest fall in the amount of farmland coming onto the market, a massive 67% down on the year to just 1,492 acres. Devon also recorded a significant drop of 30%, while in Cornwall the drop was just 4%. It was a different picture elsewhere in the South West region, with Gloucestershire almost doubling the amount of land marketed, with an enormous increase of 84% in Dorset and 37% in Wiltshire. But Devon still accounted for nearly a fifth of all the farmland marketed in the region. Wiltshire, with its extensive grain-growing acreage, accounted for nearly a third. Mrs Dart explained that an analysis of the farm transactions carried out by Savills throughout Great Britain in the first half of this year showed that farmer buyers made up half of all purchasers. This was similar to the situation in 2012. “Farm expansion continued to be the prime motive for buying, and was cited by the majority of farmer buyers,” she said. But the proportion of lifestyle buyers rose very considerably, to 40%, the highest level since 2004. She said their primary motive was not income generation from farming. “Of these buyers there was an almost equal split between those who already owned farmland and those who were purchasing for the first time. “Buying for residential or sporting reasons was also a significant motive.” While the average value of prime land was now £7,600, third-grade arable land now averaged £6,150 an acre. The average value of prime dairy land had risen by nearly 2% to £6,690, while third-grade dairy land was £5,760. Poor livestock grazing was £4,600 an acre. Read more: http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Farmland-sale-falls-massive-67-8211-prices-rise/story-19984687-detail/story.html#ixzz2ikAHWF7F Continue reading
Insight Adds To Farmland Flock
Insight adds to farmland flock Sarah Krouse 24 Oct 2013 Insight Investment has added a new farmland investment role to its team of experts in the sector, amid increased investor interest in farm assets. Insight adds to farmland flockThe asset manager has hired the former chief executive of farm investor NZ Farming Systems Uruguay to the newly created role of head of farmland management to help oversee its growing portfolio. David Beca will join later this year and be based out of London. Beca joins an eight-member team that works on farmland investments at Insight and will be responsible for overseeing the on-the-ground management of its farmland assets. The expansion of the investment team comes amid strong returns from rural land in the UK and globally. Beca has worked in a number of markets including Australia, Uruguay and South Africa for farmland investment, consulting and business analysis companies. Insight began its farmland strategy in 2011. The firm’s portfolio of investments includes a New Zealand dairy farm, a cattle station in northern Australia and arable farm assets in Romania. Other members of the team specialise in topics such as livestock and arable land and are based in a number of locations including Australia and Germany. Insight’s expansion of the team comes as it attempts to take advantage of increased investor interest in the asset class. The sector is touted as an attractive option for investors looking to diversify and boasts stronger returns than commercial property. Rural land in the UK, for example, has significantly outperformed commercial property in the country over the last five, 10 and 20 years, according to analytics firm Investment Property Databank. Rural land returned 8.9% compared with 0.7% for all property over five years; 13.2% compared with 6.3% property-wide over 10 years; and 13% compared with 8.9% for all property assets over 20 years. Beca will report to Martin Davies, head of farmland investments at Insight. Within the firm, the farmland investment team sits under specialist investments, a unit led by Reza Vishkai, who joined the firm in 2005. Beca said in a statement: “The development Continue reading
Artificial Areas Cover Only 5% Of EU – Survey
Eurostat data | Friday 25 October 2013 Artificial areas, such as buildings, roads and rail networks, covered only 5% of the total surface area of the EU in 2012. Forests and other wooded land occupied around 40%, farmland one fourth and grassland one fifth. These figures, published by Eurostat on 25 October, are the findings of a large-scale land survey, the ‘Land use/cover area frame survey’ (LUCAS), conducted most recently in 2012. LUCAS is the largest harmonised land survey ever implemented in the EU. Photographs can be found in the statistical atlas on the Eurostat site (1). More than half of Sweden (76% of total land area), Finland (72%), Estonia (61%), Slovenia (60%) and Latvia (56%) is covered by forests. The highest shares of cropland are observed in Denmark (49%), Hungary (47%), Romania (36%), the Czech Republic and Poland (both 34%), Germany (33%), Bulgaria and Italy (both 32%) and France (31%). More than two thirds (67%) of Ireland is covered by natural or agricultural grasslands, followed by the United Kingdom (40%), the Netherlands (38%), Luxembourg (37%) and Belgium (32% Finland (16%), Sweden (12%) and the Netherlands (11%) have the largest proportions of water areas. A third of Malta is covered with built-up and other artificial areas, followed by Belgium (13%), Luxembourg and the Netherlands (both 12%). Continue reading