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True costs?

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    True costs?

    Okay forget all the various ways we manage our cattle herds...like feed/breeds/feeding methods/etc.
    Consider the cost of the land alone?
    For instance if you are grazing/haying land worth $1,000/acre vs $4000/acre (or for that matter growing crops) which one costs more?
    If you had the money, instead of the land, and invested it wisely....what kind of return would you get? I have a savy old neighbour who says about 7.5% year over year(mostly bank stocks paying dividends). The Alberta Trust fund earned 8.5% last year.
    But say 7.5%? For a general figure of 3 acres/cow/year for hay production and grazing.....you would need $225 on the $1,000 land and $900 on the $4,000 land!
    Wouldn't it make more sense to sell the land and rent grazing and buy hay?

    #2
    Does it really matter? Whether your buying land at 1k or 4k an acre, your not paying it back with cows alone. 1000 acres (which doesn't raise much for cow numbers) at 4k would have an annual interest payment of $120,000. Even at 1k, it would be $30,000 - which should easily consume any profit possible.

    Thankfully land is only worth $100 to 300 around here. Maybe tops of $500 to 600. Some dumb-dumbs come in and get suckered into paying the seller his retirement bonus of about 1k an acre and then wonder why they lose it all and are gone within 10 years.

    Land doesn't appreciate around here on any measureable basis. It does on government paper, but not in the real world.

    Comment


      #3
      160 acres at $4000 is $640,000. For one quarter! At our ages, we'd be sitting on a beach somewhere. Trouble is that land is not worth $4000. an acre here, not even potato land.

      Comment


        #4
        As a land speculator there is a need to maintain and keep the fire hazard in check. Pretty hard to pay what the market says some land is worth with cows or iron.

        Comment


          #5
          ASRG, In answer to your question I would say NO.
          NO - you would not be better off selling the land,
          renting pasture and growing hay. First I'm dubious of
          anyone that claims to consistently average 7.5%
          annual return in the current marketplace. I trade
          some stocks too and the volatility has made for tough
          sledding in recent years - really since 2008. Not
          many people could honestly claim to have averaged
          7.5% year in year out in my opinion.

          Secondly if you did assume 7.5% annual interest and
          you compounded the interest your principle would
          double every 10 years approx. Well guess what - my
          farm property has done roughly the same -
          realistically doubled in 12 years and I've been making
          annual income on it as well.

          Comment


            #6
            15444 if you can buy land for
            100$/acre?????????

            $16,000/quarter ?!?!?

            Will the cows have to pack a lunch?

            Comment


              #7
              grassfarmer: I do understand land appreciation and admit it usually pays quite well over a certain period.
              The fact is sooner or later we all must quit, and probably convert our assets into cash. We can pass it down to our children, if they want it. Mine don't.
              I have been slowly getting out of the cattle business and ripping up land. I have a 1/4 that is unfit for crops or hay and the best rent I can expect is probably around $35/acre. Last spring the hutterites bought the section right beside this land for $3910/acre ( I live close to Red Deer). Because I have a house on this 1/4 I doubt I will have much trouble selling it in the 750-800K range (which would work well with the capital gains excemption).
              Royal bank shares have paid an average dividend of 6.5% over the last 20 years(according to the said neighbour), so at 6.5% on 750K I could recieve an income of $48,500. At present I rent the house out at $1,000 month ($12K/yr) and if I was renting 159 acres at $35/ac my total income for the rest of the 1/4 would be $5565 for a total of $17,565, less $2700 property tax, $14,865.
              I would further not have maintenance to fences/house.
              On the other 3 quarters I own I have a good renter, mostly in crops or capable of growing crops, and I would probably continue with that arrangement for awhile. My house is on this land as well as a rental trailer. I would like to see the farmers son renting this land, buy it eventually, but I don't know if he could ever swing the price.
              These things are never easy, but time marches on.

              Comment


                #8
                Allfarmer, @ $100/acre, the land won't be even remotely suitable for crops. It will likely have some rock outcroppings and a fair bit of low, marshy land. Likely also be cleared, so you can't use the timber for revenue. Worst thing about that price is you have to compete with the American hunters for it.

                But could it run a pair for every 4-6 acres? Very likely at least.

                A neighbor's place, good land (just needs a dozer to it) 320 acres, just sold for 70k. Even has a house and well on it. Sold through the bank, so I was out of the loop and missed out on it.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Royal Bank shares were $50.65 on Jan 31st 2008 and
                  they were $61.20 on Thursday. That's around 3.5%
                  annual with the interest compounded according to my
                  math. Still a better return than many bank accounts
                  are paying.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I have some plain old fashioned mutual
                    funds that have returned 9% average over
                    the last 15 years. Some years returned
                    20%, some -12%. There sure are places to
                    park money that offers a decent return. I
                    always am surprised when guys say there is
                    nowhere to put their money other than
                    land. I disagree.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I'd sure be interested in hearing the name of the fund
                      that has averaged that over the last 15 years
                      Freewheat and what the management fees are. I'm not
                      saying there isn't money to be made in the
                      stockmarket just that since 2007 investment of any
                      kind has been more volatile and the returns
                      considerably lower than the decade before.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        The management fees are between .8 and 1.1
                        % generally.

                        The thing with funds, is you gotta stick
                        with them through thick and thin, and
                        dollar cost average them, so you are
                        buying more units when the price is lower
                        as well.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          If your mutual funds were all in Canadian based
                          companies you basically get the average of the TSX
                          less management fees no? The TSX topped 15,000
                          nearly 5 years ago and is now at 12,750 - what is the
                          game plan if it remains in the 12's or 13's for another
                          5 or 10 years? The good years pre-2008 will be
                          diluted by more poorer years so your 15 year average
                          will drop. Historically I would agree stockmarkets
                          have always risen and it pays to stay in but I think we
                          are in dramatically different territory at the moment.
                          An awful lot of people, in fact most i'd think, that
                          owned mutuals funds in 2008 will not have recovered
                          their capital lost back then.

                          I had one managed fund with a real successful track
                          record - from set up in mid 90s it's only single figure
                          year was 2000 when it did 9%, most years were 12-
                          15%. It dropped 30% in 2008 and the managers don't
                          have a clue how to recoup that. I started investing
                          directly for myself after that and am ahead of that
                          fund by quite a ways and don't have to pay a fund
                          manager.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I wouldn't even think of selling land and trying to make money in stocks, or on the non existent interest rates of today unless I had already maxed out my farmland capital gains exemption. That is the game changer, IMHO.

                            The stock market is too risky to put all your hopes into. It's only to be played with using money you don't mind losing. This year seen lots of tax returns where the financial advisor made much more money than the investor. In fact, I haven't seen one where the advisor made less. That should tell us all something.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              There are ways to mitigate risk in stock-market
                              investing kato, its not a total crap shoot. Just as there
                              are ways to mitigate risk in agriculture.
                              I agree with you on the advisor thing though - lots of
                              advisors taking $10k a year off individual investors
                              with no responsibility when markets and their
                              customers accounts drop 30%. Funny thing was when
                              I started studying investing myself it became clear
                              how poor these advisors can be - buying too late,
                              selling too early - school-boy errors and they get
                              paid just the same.

                              Comment

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