US land prices fall as weak crop prices sap farm incomes
US land prices approached a fourth year of unbroken decline, amid growing worries over the dent to farm incomes from weak prices, which for corn are below breakeven levels for many growers.
A farmland price index compiled by Creighton University from a survey of lenders came in at 39.3 points for October, down a modest 0.3 points for last month, but remaining well below the 50.0 level that indicates a neutral market.
The decline, which extended an unbroken run of price declines stretching back to December 2013, came amid worries farm finances prompted by current crop prices, particularly for growers renting land, so facing additional costs.
For farmers renting land, crop prices of $3.50-3.75 a bushel, a range which roughly covers the spread of Chicago futures prices out to next summer, are not covering costs for 45% of growers, Creighton's survey showed.
Only 2.4% of growers were achieving profits at that level.
'Below the breakeven by all means'
And given that many growers receive prices below futures – cash corn prices as monitored by Reuters ranged on Friday from a discount to December futures of $0.08 a bushel in Union City, Indiana to $0.45 a bushel in Lincoln Nebraska – profitability prospects may be even worse.
Fritz Kuhlmeier, chief executive of Citizens State Bank in Lena, Illinois, said: "Where can I find a spot price for corn of $3.50 a bushel or above today?
"Try $3.00 -3.20, which is below the breakeven by all means."
December futures were on Monday priced at $3.49 ¾ a bushel.
Default worries
The "weak farm income and low agriculture commodity prices" pose a threat to the viability of some farms, the survey showed.
A handful of bankers, some 9.5%, "expect farm loan foreclosures to pose the greatest threat to banking operations over the next five years," said Ernie Goss, the Creighton University economics professor in charge of the survey.
However, the survey also showed some recovery in the US farm equipment market, which came in with a reading of 29.3 – the highest in nearly three years, if still well below the 50.0 neutral level.
Association of Equipment Manufacturers data for September showed US sales of four wheel drive tractors, beloved by large arable growers, soaring 25% year on year to 214 units, to take the total for the first nine months of September to 1,501 vehicles, a rise of 2.1% year on year.
US combine harvested sales rose 6.0% to 478 units, taking the nine-month total to 2,956, down 3.5% year on year.
About last spring the USA farmer was starting to see issues with their lenders etc. Few BTOs in Different states declared bankruptcy. One was a huge guy in ND with more owing than his entire farm was worth the other a company in Illinois or Iowa which Case took over to get some money back.
36 bush wheat at 6 is 216 or below cost of production.
69 barley at 3 is 207 below cost of production.
39 canola at 11 is 429 but that has to pull the other two up to give you a break even year.
80 plus rents and 428000 dollar quarters and 3/4 of a million combines and drills and tractors is not sustainable.
Any one do their fall review and how happy was your lender.
Its only one year but if this continues into 2019 she is over.
US land prices approached a fourth year of unbroken decline, amid growing worries over the dent to farm incomes from weak prices, which for corn are below breakeven levels for many growers.
A farmland price index compiled by Creighton University from a survey of lenders came in at 39.3 points for October, down a modest 0.3 points for last month, but remaining well below the 50.0 level that indicates a neutral market.
The decline, which extended an unbroken run of price declines stretching back to December 2013, came amid worries farm finances prompted by current crop prices, particularly for growers renting land, so facing additional costs.
For farmers renting land, crop prices of $3.50-3.75 a bushel, a range which roughly covers the spread of Chicago futures prices out to next summer, are not covering costs for 45% of growers, Creighton's survey showed.
Only 2.4% of growers were achieving profits at that level.
'Below the breakeven by all means'
And given that many growers receive prices below futures – cash corn prices as monitored by Reuters ranged on Friday from a discount to December futures of $0.08 a bushel in Union City, Indiana to $0.45 a bushel in Lincoln Nebraska – profitability prospects may be even worse.
Fritz Kuhlmeier, chief executive of Citizens State Bank in Lena, Illinois, said: "Where can I find a spot price for corn of $3.50 a bushel or above today?
"Try $3.00 -3.20, which is below the breakeven by all means."
December futures were on Monday priced at $3.49 ¾ a bushel.
Default worries
The "weak farm income and low agriculture commodity prices" pose a threat to the viability of some farms, the survey showed.
A handful of bankers, some 9.5%, "expect farm loan foreclosures to pose the greatest threat to banking operations over the next five years," said Ernie Goss, the Creighton University economics professor in charge of the survey.
However, the survey also showed some recovery in the US farm equipment market, which came in with a reading of 29.3 – the highest in nearly three years, if still well below the 50.0 neutral level.
Association of Equipment Manufacturers data for September showed US sales of four wheel drive tractors, beloved by large arable growers, soaring 25% year on year to 214 units, to take the total for the first nine months of September to 1,501 vehicles, a rise of 2.1% year on year.
US combine harvested sales rose 6.0% to 478 units, taking the nine-month total to 2,956, down 3.5% year on year.
About last spring the USA farmer was starting to see issues with their lenders etc. Few BTOs in Different states declared bankruptcy. One was a huge guy in ND with more owing than his entire farm was worth the other a company in Illinois or Iowa which Case took over to get some money back.
36 bush wheat at 6 is 216 or below cost of production.
69 barley at 3 is 207 below cost of production.
39 canola at 11 is 429 but that has to pull the other two up to give you a break even year.
80 plus rents and 428000 dollar quarters and 3/4 of a million combines and drills and tractors is not sustainable.
Any one do their fall review and how happy was your lender.
Its only one year but if this continues into 2019 she is over.
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