Tag Archives: northern-plains
Growth In Farmland Values Slowing But Still Hot
AUGUST 6, 2013 By: Fran Howard Land values, particularly for cropland in the Corn Belt and Northern Plains, soared again in 2013, but analysts warn that current growth rates are not sustainable given the recent declines in grain and oilseed prices and the strengthening U.S. dollar. According to USDA’s Land Values report , released Aug. 2, U.S. farm real estate value, a measure of the value of all land and buildings on farms, averaged $2,900 per acre in 2013, up 9.4% from 2012 values. Regional changes ranged from a 23.1% increase in the Northern Plains region to flat in the Southeast. Not surprisingly, the highest farm real estate values of $6,400 per acre were in the Corn Belt. The Mountain region had the lowest farm real estate value of $1,020 per acre. “The last few months, the growth rate has been coming down,” says Ernie Goss, MacAllister Chair in Regional Economics at Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska. “Softer corn and soybean prices, the stronger dollar, and slower economic growth globally are all combining to put a dent in the growth in farmland values.” Still, Goss anticipates that long-term average farmland values will continue to grow at about 7-8% a year. “Rising interest rates could also take a little air out of the land-price bubble,” Goss says. “Growth rates of 23%, 15% are not sustainable.” Yet even if land values were to fall, he says, the country would not see a repeat of the 1980s farm crisis because farmland is nowhere near as highly leveraged today. The average value of U.S. cropland, according to the report, increased $460 per acre, up 13% from 2012 levels to $4,000 per acre. Year-over-year cropland values in the Northern Plains and Corn Belt rose 25 and 16.1% to $2,950 and $6,980 per acre, respectively. In the Southeast, the value of cropland fell 2.8% to $3,410. The highest valued cropland was in New Jersey at $12,800 per acre up 4.1%, followed by California at $10,190, and Colorado at $9,000. Iowa and Illinois values were close behind at $8,600 and $7,900. Farmland values in Iowa have risen by double digits in each year since 2010, when the value of cropland was $5,064, according to the Iowa State University land value survey. “Where does this leave us? Many people have discussed the possibility that land is on a speculative bubble and that land values are going to collapse. Will the land market collapse like it did in the early 1980s or similar to the housing market a few years ago? No one knows for sure. But there are several key variables to watch to formulate an opinion,” says Michael Duffy, extension economist with Iowa State University, on his website. “One of the key variables to watch is income. Theory tells us it would be the net income per acre that is the key, but analysis shows that the total income is a better predictor. In Iowa there is a 95% correlation between land values and the value of agricultural production in the state. There is an 89% correlation between land values and net farm income,” Duffy says. According to USDA’s recent report, value of cropland fell in four states, Florida, South Carolina, New Mexico, and New York, and held steady in seven others. The average value of U.S. pastureland increased to $1,200 per acre, up 4.3% from 2012 levels. Southeast pastureland fell 1.5% below year-earlier levels to $3,380, while pastureland in the Northern Plains soared 18.4% to $81. “The attraction of farm life is increasing, so there is a high motivation to return to the farm, but buying a farm operation is not easy,” Goss says. As today’s landowners die, leaving the farm to their heirs, the heirs are often unable to buyout their siblings or cousins. Thus farms will continue to get larger and larger, he adds. Continue reading