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Farmland Bubble? 10-Year Rise Raises Red Flags
By William L. Watts, MarketWatch An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified the location of a farm sale that took place in Grundy County, Iowa. The story has been corrected. NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Farmland prices have been on a tear for over a decade, barely slowing as the rest of the country suffered a housing collapse, leading economists and investors to worry that a dangerous bubble is forming in the heartland. The average acre of Iowa farm real estate rose 20% in value to $8,400 in 2013, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That’s up from $3,850 in 2009, and data show overall farmland prices have been on the rise for more than a decade. It’s a similar story across the Corn Belt and the Northern Plains. But it takes more than a string of big gains to blow a bubble. And while some farm real-estate professionals are wary, they argue that the evidence doesn’t justify bubble fears – at least not yet. “In general, if you ask, is farmland in a bubble, I’ll say, no,” said John Taylor, national farm and ranch executive for U.S. Trust, a private bank that is part of Bank of America Corp. “But if you ask, are some people paying bubble prices, I’ll say, yes.” There are strong fundamental reasons behind the run-up in farmland prices. First off, farm income has surged over the last decade as commodity prices boomed. Ultralow interest rates also help. But now, commodity prices are setting back and interest rates have started to move higher, albeit from very low levels. That’s why the next year or two will provide an important test. “This is the moment of truth, I think,” said Brent Gloy, an agricultural economics professor at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. If prices continue to surge in the face of intensifying headwinds, it would then be a troubling sign that a bubble was building in farmland, he said. Up until recently, however, farmland values have risen in the midst of what could be termed a positive perfect storm, Gloy and others noted. The so-called commodity supercycle saw prices for corn, wheat and soybeans soar as China and other emerging markets sucked up an increasing share of commodities from around the globe. Demand for biofuels added to gains for corn. Meanwhile, interest rates fell sharply as the Federal Reserve cut official interest rates toward zero in response to the financial crisis. The Department of Agriculture has forecast 2013 national farm income to rise 6% to $121 billion, around $3 billion above the previous record set in 2011. Ultralow interest rates have affected farmland prices in more ways than one, noted Jim Farrell, president and chief executive of Omaha-based Farmers National Company, a farm-management and land sales firm. Low rates make it cheaper to finance land purchases, but they’ve also fueled a hunt for yield that’s helped boost demand for farmland. At the same time, worries that there will be nowhere to park the proceeds from a farm sale have helped limit the supply of farmland on the market, he noted. Mike Walsten, who tracks prices as editor of the Land Owner newsletter in Cedar Falls, Iowa, said that farmers are finding it “a little more difficult to get the prices they got six months ago.” He noted, however, that he and many others had anticipated a softening of the market last year, only for a drought to send crop prices soaring. Now, a softer market for farmland is most evident in Iowa and southeastern Minnesota, where the growing season has been especially difficult, Walsten said. There have been “no sales” at auctions where prices didn’t meet minimum bid expectations. Inflection point Still, there are outliers. A piece of “exceptionally prime” farmland in Grundy County, Iowa, brought in a record $17,600 an acre, Walsten said, while a recent sale in Lincoln County, South Dakota, saw an 80-acre parcel bring $12,450 an acre. And prices in the eastern half of the Corn Belt continue to show strength, with prices still on the rise in Illinois, while Indiana and Ohio have seen record highs. Farrell said he agrees that the farmland market is likely at an inflection point that bears watching. But like many observers, he notes there are significant differences between the current situation and the late 1970s, when a credit-fueled land-buying frenzy sowed the seeds of the subsequent decade’s farm crisis. Brokers and other observers note that lenders, who aggressively pushed loans for farm purchases in the 1970s, are much more circumspect today, at least when it comes to land purchases. In many cases, lenders won’t provide more than around $6,000 an acre in credit for a farmland purchase, Walsten said. There are other differences. For one, farm incomes were declining heading into the 1980s, while now they are on the rise, Farrell noted. Also, while there’s been talk of hedge funds and other big speculators jumping into the market, farm purchases are still predominantly made by other farmers, experts say. An annual land survey conducted by Iowa State University found that 78% of farm purchases in 2012 were made by farmers. A large chunk of other purchases were made by people who live close by, such as retired farmers or business owners. That’s not to say there isn’t still a significant speculative element to those purchases, land brokers say. But a relative lack of leverage has helped soothe fears of a repeat of the 1970s and 1980s. “You will find that some of our ag banks clearly remember some of the issues they faced with collateral-based lending,” Kansas City Federal Reserve President Esther George said in July, according to Reuters. “So in the banking industry, we do not see the levels of leverage that characterized what we saw then.” Still, observers question whether lenders have as strong a grip on their farmer clients’ balance sheets as they think. Farmers have often been quick to use their cash reserves for land purchases. That means they could be hitting up those lenders for larger operating loans in the future, said Purdue’s Gloy, adding that the cost of inputs, including seed and fertilizer, are also running high. If you buy today at the market high, you’re kind of betting on the next five years being as good as the last five— Brent Gloy, Purdue University Unsurprisingly, operators are also dealing with a strong rise in cash rents, which could add to a squeeze if commodity prices see a sharp drop. That said, analysts say it’s still difficult to see what, at this point, would trigger the waves of forced selling and foreclosures that would make for a new crisis. ‘You just walk away’ Professional investors are finding they need to be much pickier about purchases. Shonda Warner, managing director of Chess Ag Full Harvest Partners, which manages a series of farmland investment funds, says she would be willing to buy around one in five farms that she looked at when she founded the business in 2006. Now it’s closer to one in 20. U.S. Trust’s Taylor said it has become harder in the last 12 to 16 months to find farms that fit the institution’s criteria. While cash rents have risen, they haven’t kept pace with the sharp rise in farmland prices. “We’ve seen a lot of farms come up for sale and we can’t understand how they paid the price they paid,” he said. In such cases, the buyers are looking at a return of around 2%, he said, noting that U.S. Trust looks for a gross lease rate of 5%. In such cases, “you just walk away,” he said. But like others, he expects farmland prices to return to a more normal trend. “If you continue to see people pay prices not justified — and if they start to do it with debt — that would be a warning sign,” he said. On a continuous basis, corn futures are down more than 36% in the year-to-date, with the December contract changing hands around $4.41 a bushel. Soybean futures are down around 8.2% year-to-date, leaving November futures just below $13 a bushel, while December hard-red winter wheat futures are off more than 10% since the start of the year to trade near $7 a bushel. Those are still attractive prices, but a decline toward the $3 level for corn and a continued slide for other crops would take a toll. Corn futures spent a large chunk of 2011 and 2012 north of $7. “The last several years have been phenomenally profitable. If you buy today at the market high, you’re kind of betting on the next five years being as good as the last five,” Gloy said. “That’s a pretty steep wager.” William L. Watts is MarketWatch’s senior markets writer, based in New York. Follow him on Twitter @wlwatts. Continue reading
U.S. Farmland Market Cooling Entering Key Auction Season
By Christine Stebbins CHICAGO, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 2:03pm EDT (Reuters) – The red-hot rush for U.S. grain land is cooling after years of record prices, but prime acreage is still attracting top dollar in the heart of the Corn Belt so far this fall, according to land auctioneers. “On higher quality land it’s been pretty strong steady, but on medium and lower quality land we’ve seen some pullback,” said Randy Hertz, CEO of Iowa-based Hertz Farm Management. “There’s a lot of uncertainty out here in terms of what the future holds.” The key season for U.S. farmland sales is October through December, when Midwest and Plains grain farmers are rolling in harvest cash and planning their taxes. Most economists and bankers say it is too early to tell if land values have peaked. “We’ve peaked for right now unless the grain markets rebound sharply, when it might change things and go the other direction. But right now I think is probably a leveling off period,” said Eric Mueller, an auctioneer and broker at Omaha-based Farmers National, the largest farm management company in the country. Recent farmland sales from Ohio to Nebraska have ranged from about $3,000 an acre up to $16,000 for top quality ground. While prices are strong the rate of gain has eased from 2012 when prices jumped 20 percent to 30 percent. “Interest rates are creeping up a little. But, ultimately, I think the biggest factor is grain. There’s still a lot of money out there, but buyers are going to be a little bit less aggressive with the grain markets coming down,” Mueller said. “The sentiment is holding in Nebraska and Iowa.” Corn prices are down 30 percent since last fall on the outlook for a record harvest. But corn revenues this year are still seen strong with higher yields after last year’s drought. “Frankly the last 10 years have been phenomenal. It’s off-the-chart good,” said Brent Gloy, an agricultural economist with Purdue University. “It looks like to me this is the first time we’ve seen some substantial headwinds in the market for a while.” Chicago Board of Trade December corn on March 1 was $5.57, but closed at $4.57 on Thursday. A year ago, the price was $6.20. “If it becomes obvious that corn prices are going to shake out below $4 in the $3 range, we’re at a peak,” Gloy said. “The lower commodity prices are hard to justify the really high land prices we’ve been seeing. If you take high quality farmland in Indiana, if you get much over $10,000 an acre, you’ve got to have cash rents over $300 an acre, in some cases $400 or $500. If corn prices are below $5, it’s going to be hard to pay those rents.” Bankers and economists watch farm land prices closely. Land represents 85 percent of farmer assets – and loan collateral. Federal Reserve banker surveys for the quarter ended in June cited lower rates of gain in land prices. At the same time, bankers cautioned farmers against chasing price dips with borrowed money, dreading another 1980s farm debt crash. “The difference with the 1980s is that 75 percent of land then had mortgages. Today, 25 percent does,” said Jeff Obrecht, an Iowa-based real estate broker with Farmers National. “That makes a big difference. We just don’t have the debt out there that we had. Part of that is lenders are requiring more. If you buy at $10,000 acre, you’re going to have to put $5,000 down.” Auctioneers said that, in recent weeks, more ‘no sales’ have been reported at Midwest auctions as buyers think through revenue, cash and borrowing fundamentals. “When I sold a piece a property two years ago for $14,600 we got there in less than 5 minutes,” said Bruce Huber of Hickory Point Bank in Decatur, Illinois. “Some of these auctions are taking longer, fewer bidders. You can just tell the enthusiasm for the higher prices seems to be wanting yet the prices are still there.” So as land auctions pick up starting in October, auctioneers are expecting some price resilience. “Farmers buy about 70 percent of the farms in the Midwest,” said Hertz. “They’ve got cash, there are record amounts of cash. That cash at a bank or short-term deposits doesn’t pay much – essentially, less than 1 percent. Compare that to a farm that can earn 3-4-5 percent.” (Reporting by Christine Stebbins.; Editing by Andre Grenon) Continue reading
Adding Up Farmland Value Factors
http://www.agricultu….jpg&type=admin Jeff Caldwell 09/17/2013 Death and taxes. The old saying is those are the only two certainties in this world. And right now, that’s especially true for the farmland market. There’s not as much land going onto the market for sale right now — for a few reasons — and that calls for anybody looking to add acres to their farm to always be ready to pull the trigger, says one farmland market expert. The proposition of buying or selling land, especially the latter, is typically an emotional one, and as such doesn’t always follow market fundamentals and dynamics in lockstep. So, in lieu of a textbook for how to approach buying land when considering these factors, it’s important to always be ready when the time arises that circumstances dictate a seller to pull the trigger, says Randy Hertz, accredited farm manager and land consultant with Hertz Farm Management, Inc. “Certainly, you need to be in buying position. As people get panicky, they may be willing to take a lower price or offer lower than the general public really would anticipate. It’s an emotional decision,” he says. That emotion is typically manifested directly in how buyers approach potential land buys from sellers who, whether it’s the settlement of an estate by multiple stakeholders or a retirement, may be facing just as emotional a set of circumstances themselves. Combine that with the fact that buying land is a long-term decision, and it can make it tough to forecast how any given land sale will shake out. Then, add on to that variables specific to years like 2013, namely whether the land was planted or laid idle because of adverse weather, and sale prices are tough to peg. All this adds to the importance of staying in that buying position, Hertz says. “As the markets go against you, it’s an angst. As prices go up, you feel good about things. There’s a lot of prevented-planting acres this year. In those areas, it certainly was negatively impacted by the emotions of struggling crops,” he says, adding that a recent Iowa land sale netted a lower-than-expected price because it hadn’t been planted in the spring because of the weather. “People get bullish at the top. People overstay the market. Farmers are notorious for this. They ride it up, ride it down, and right at the bottom, freak out and sell in the bottom third of the market. “It’s such an imperfect market,” he adds. Right now, a major factor playing into both the amount of land going up for sale and the price volatility those sales yield is the state of the economy, both on the macro level and in the ag sector. In the former, taxes and return on investment are huge factors. Farmland remains a solid investment compared to equities, and with the tax implications of selling land as they are right now, it makes it easy to hold on, even if the climb in land values is seen tapering off. “There are just fewer farms on the market now. The reason for that is when you’ve got a land market that increases in value, people don’t want to pay taxes on that increase. And, you’ve got low interest rates. They say ‘I’m earning 3% to 3 1/2% on rented land. What would I do if I sold? I’d have to pay tax on $9,000/acre in capital gains,” Hertz says. “You’re going to pay one-third of that in taxes, plus the privilege of 1% on a CD. So, you’ve seen a lot fewer farms for sale. Ones selling are ones stepping up in basis, estates or families fighting.” More specific to the ag sector, crop inputs and cash land rents will continue to drive where sale prices wind up moving forward. The former group influences the direction of the latter, and how close rents have kept up with the general fluctuation of land values will help determine the willingness of landowners on the fence to sell land. “The dynamics of the farm market, specifically inputs have rocketed. Cash rents have not kept pace with the profits farmers have gotten. People are wondering what will happen with cash rents,” Hertz says. “If you had not increased along with where it should’ve been, you probably should’ve gotten an increase. If you were pretty good but not at top of the market, rent will probably be pretty good next year. If you were at the high for cash rent last year, probably adjust downward.” Specific to the last few years in the heart of the Corn Belt, the shape of the current crop on top of how sharply the land market’s fluctuated in the last five years will likely contribute to how it flexes and moves in the future, Hertz says. That’s clear when comparing past moves in key states in the region. “Illinois and Indiana are really strong right now. They’ve got a good crop coming, and they have been somewhat toned-down in their increases. Certainly not as fast as the increases Iowa has seen,” he says. “You’re going to see some adjustments like that.” And while he fully expects the general rise in farmland values to taper off in the coming year, Hertz says current strong grain prices will likely keep the market out of the red, even if this year’s crops don’t amount to earlier expectations. “How could you ever look a gift horse in the mouth? We can sell new-crop soybeans for over $13/bushel cash. Those are phenomenal prices. Yes, we’re going to get kicked in the shorts with our soybean yield, but you still have to sell the stuff,” he adds. “You’ve still got to make a decision.” Continue reading