Understand the Value of Investing in Farmland

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 29, 2023

From agriculture.com and authored by one of our valued customers, David Whitaker:

When it comes to investing in farmland, it’s essential to take the long-term approach. Farmland investments are typically held for the long term, as they are considered assets that appreciate over time. While there may be good years with great short-term returns, farmland investment is primarily a hold asset for the future. 

Factors Influencing Farmland Prices

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 20, 2023

From Successful Farming: 

Headlines boasting record-breaking farmland sales and surging values gave voice to the excitement in the market last year while land prices climbed. As 2023 marches on, the experts say some of that excitement may be waning and to expect strong, but flatter prices going forward.

                                                       PHOTO: KATIV, GETTY IMAGES

“We’ll probably see some high reports of really high-quality farms that are well-located…and we might see some lower-quality farms start to back up a little bit in prices as we head toward the end of the year,” says Tim Koch, executive vice president of business development for Farm Credit Services of America. “But as a whole, I would anticipate that we’ll see a flattening of prices throughout the remainder of the year.”

Jackson Takach, chief economist at Farmer Mac, put it this way: “You’re still seeing positive gains in land values, quarter over quarter, but at a much-reduced rate compared to ’21 or ’22, when they were in the double digits of annual and quarterly growth. Today they’re in the 1% to 3% range.”

Why Big Finance is Betting on Farmland

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 18, 2023

From farmprogress.com: 

                                            Photo: Holly Spangler

On the wind-swept plains of the heartland, an agricultural revolution is quietly underway. This one’s not led by advances in machinery or biotech, but rather by the inconspicuous behemoths of financial institutions: the institutional investor.

Who are these institutional investors?

Everyday individual investors make up the entities buying farmland, bringing together funds from people of various professions and backgrounds. Individual investors are people just like you and me: teachers, health-care workers, civil servants contributing to pension funds, or affluent individuals or families engaged with mutual funds or private equity funds. They can also be linked to religious, academic or cultural organizations with sizable endowments.

The attraction of institutional investment vehicles lies in their ability to unlock opportunities that would otherwise be unreachable for individuals.

Institutional investors leverage professional expertise, including financial advisers and fund managers, to make informed investment decisions. They employ a systematic approach to investing, involving rigorous analysis, complex strategies and risk management practices. They garner the benefits of scale, driving down costs, granting access to opportunities not available for smaller investors and potentially boosting returns for those who invest.

2023 WRA Convention

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 15, 2023

Are you planning to attend this year’s Wisconsin REALTORS Association Annual Convention? If so, we’ll see you there!

We’ll be parked in booth #214 with CamoAg. The perfect opportunity to see the comp tool redefining land sales & analysis. Get ready to rev past the competition!

The Wisconsin Realtors Association Annual Convention | October 1-3, Kalahari Resort, Wisconsin Dells

Information for Setting 2024 Cash Rents

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 14, 2023

From farmdoc daily: The National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently released state and county rents for 2023. The Illinois Society of Professional Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers released their projections of 2024 rents on professionally managed farmland. Overall, cash rents increased from 2022 to 2023. Results from the Illinois Society survey suggest that cash rents may decline slightly from 2023 to 2024.

Cash rents vary across Illinois, as illustrated in Figure 2, which shows average county cash rents for non-irrigated cropland released by NASS on August 27. This year, NASS did not report cash rents for some major agricultural counties in Illinois. In Figure 2, rents for unreported counties were estimated based on a regression analysis, discussed below, relating rent levels to a county-level soil productivity index with agricultural district adjustment factors.

As is typical, cash rents are the highest in the central part of the state while cash rents are lower in southern Illinois. The highest reported average cash rent for 2023 is $367 per acre for Moultrie County. The second highest average rent is $362 for Piatt County. Moultrie and Piatt are adjacent counties in central Illinois and tied for the highest cash rent levels in Illinois in 2022 ($331 per acre).  The lowest cash rent reported for 2023 is $58 per acre in Johnson County, a county in southern Illinois which also had the lowest rent reported for 2022 ($53 per acre). See farmdoc daily from September 13, 2022 for last year’s average cash rent analysis.

Land Values Report Shows Stability After ‘Breakneck-Paced’ Growth

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 12, 2023

From agupdate.com: 

Compared to the last two years, the mid-year land values report, given by Luke Worrell chair of Land Values Conference, at the Farm Progress Show in Decatur on Aug. 30, was anti-climactic.

The snapshot of land values, sponsored by the Illinois Society of Professional Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers, shows stable land values in what he calls a “catch-your-breath” report after two years of a break-neck pace.

“It’s the first time in a long time I don’t have any crazy numbers to throw out,” Worrell said after land values increased between 40% and 50% in some cases during the last couple of volatile years.

“You can’t have 20% increases every year,” said University of Illinois ag economist Gary Schnitkey.

The report comes from a survey of Illinois Society members about what they saw in the first six months of the year and what they expect for the next six months. Not much has changed since the beginning of 2023, Worrell said.

Inflation and Recession Pressures: Is Farmland a Good Investment Right Now?

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 8, 2023

According to Bruce Sherrick, professor at the University of Illinois, you might not need to worry about what inflation is doing to your farmland values.

From AgWeb.com:  

The Federal Reserve is hosting its Economy Policy Symposium this week, which has all eyes on Jackson Hole Wyoming for further details on inflation, interest rates and if a recession is looming. But would a recession effect your operation the way you think? 

According to Bruce Sherrick, professor at the University of Illinois, you might not need to worry about what inflation is doing to your farmland values.

“Farmland returns are very highly correlated with inflation,” Sherrick says. “Most importantly, it has a positive correlation with inflation.”

Sherrick says this correlation is derived from the size and debt of the industry.

“Put the entire holdings of the country on one balance sheet and it’s now four trillion plus and only 13% leveraged, so 13% debt underneath it,” he says. “An interest rate change doesn’t have as big of a proportional impact as if you were talking about companies traded on the stock exchange, where the average leverage turns out to be around two-thirds.”

While the percentage of debt is low in comparison, he also highlights it’s mostly long-term, fixed-rate debt. Increasing interest rates won’t have as large of an impact on that, but it will decrease transactions.

Kansas City Fed: Farmland Values Remain Strong, as Interest Rates Climb and Farm Income Tempers

accountMktgLSB | calendar-monthSeptember 6, 2023

From Farm Policy News: In a recent update from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City (“Farmland Values Stay Resilient as Farm Economy Moderates“), Francisco Scott and Ty Kreitman indicated that, “Strength in farm real estate values persisted in the second quarter despite some moderation in the farm economy and higher interest rates.

“Growth in farmland values eased from the surge of recent years, but remained strong through the first half of 2022.

Scott and Kreitman noted that, “Farm income moderated in all the participating Districts during the second quarter. Following nearly two years of considerable strength, improvement in farm income waned according to Federal Reserve Surveys of Agricultural Credit Conditions.”