Always lots of talk about how rents are too high, so what is a fair return for renter,10/20/25%,a 50 bu canola crop at $11/550 x20% =110 too much ??? 60 bu wheat@650=390x20%=78. Lots seem to think they should have land for nothing or a 3% return for value to landlord, fair????
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Originally posted by Horse View PostAlways lots of talk about how rents are too high, so what is a fair return for renter,10/20/25%,a 50 bu canola crop at $11/550 x20% =110 too much ??? 60 bu wheat@650=390x20%=78. Lots seem to think they should have land for nothing or a 3% return for value to landlord, fair????
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I've never seen Landlords hold a gun to the heads of tennants. You wanted it, now pay up. WTF...do you HOPE to average out over a three or five year term? Should every crop turn a profit every year? Whose taking the biggest risk? The landlord deserves a "fair" return but more than the tennant? Again, whose taking the biggest risk? If you want to give margin away to satisfy your ego...go ahead. If you can't stand to see your neighbors get it or have one more acre than yourself....
In this part of the country, the amount of land you farm can depend on who you're hanging around with and who your relatives are. High testosterone types...competitive at all costs. In some cases bigger balls than brains.
To each their own! I won't begrudge your success or mourn your failure!Last edited by farmaholic; Sep 3, 2017, 22:48.
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Some dirt here traded for about $320K, 3% on that "investment"(loosely termed) on 150 acres is about $64/ac. Each additional half percent on the $320K initial investment adds about ten bucks to the per acre rent.
This all tells me "Investors" are dumping cash into farmland. ..because the rental income would barely pay the interest on a loan (without a huge down payment) let alone any principle payments.
Yup...give-em as much as you can so you can farm it...but never own it!Last edited by farmaholic; Sep 3, 2017, 22:50.
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What about guys getting 30 bus wheat at $7 ?
Or 25 bus peas at $8
Or 25 bus canola at today's price ? Not some fukin fairy tail B/S
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Why is it such a fukin sin for a farmer to get lucky once in 20 years to get a good crop and a good price at reasonable rents ?
If times are that good , go back and farm it yourself and take that 100% of the risk back and pray you don't get flooded out , hail out , frosted out , driughtef out , get no bugs or have to spend a fortune on crop disease . *** some landlords and the entire Ag industry needs to wake the *** up to the down side that faces the actual farmers on a day to day basis . And no insurance is going to cover all that , or even part of it .
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75% of the landlords are renting out their land now for a reason , because they could not even make when they could .... sorry that's a fact
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Originally posted by fjlip View PostHow about too old to keep farming, but rather not sell.
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It didn't seem that long ago people couldn't rent out land for more than taxes. Things come full circle. Rents starting to come up here. Wasn't long ago nobody wanted this hilly, rocky, sloughy clay. Now landlords hear what Billy is getting across the way on the good ground and figures they're entitled to more. Okay fine but now when the only thing half this poorer ground can produce profit at higher rent is canola you know the result. When club root strikes too ****ing bad. Nobody wants it except for pasture then.
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