• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bankruptcies of the 80s

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #31
    Originally posted by farmaholic
    Whenever we bought in the past it always seemed like too much money.
    I always thought land was too expensive, still do, until you buy and have it paid for.
    Did all the buying between 1986 and 2004. Pre run-up.
    Sask land prices were lagging badly. Seems it was the best kept secret from Sask farmers.... until the rest of the world found out.

    Would you buy the land beside you your neighbor is currently renting? Out bid them?
    Remember we are STO's in the grand scheme of things.
    Rent next to no land and own enough to be a modest sized farm.
    We have capacity for more.

    Seems prices here may have reached a level, that even farmers are paying but investors who are speculating are not interested. If high single or double digit increases in land values are what they're looking for..... that ship may have already sailed. All that's left is schtoopit farmers.
    I currently rent the grain land off of the owner. He rents the hay and pasture to another guy.

    To answer your question, if it is for sale and I know the renter had a chance to buy it, I assume he is passing on it. I don't go behind closed doors and try persuade owners to sell it out from under their current tenant though.

    Rent is a different ball game. I believe that there is an unwritten rule that you don't stick your nose in someone elses rent. If I get approached by an owner to rent a piece, I talk to the guy that I know has been renting it to see what is up. If he says he is done with it, I then go talk to the owner. If he says he isn't done with it, I let renter and owner hash things out.

    Have been in a situation where I told the renter that I was approached by the owner, and the renter had no clue that he didn't have the land for next year. I just don't want to be that guy in the community that everybody hates.

    All bets are off if I hear that a guy has been snooping around anything I rent though.

    Comment


      #32
      Originally posted by farmaholic
      Is that an FCC thing? Between family members only or a willing seller arm's length deals as well?

      Purchase agreements etc must be needed. Contractual agreements tailor made?
      FCC does offer this type of loan. It’s for any seller willing to take the payments over 5 annual increments, will save buyer significant $ on interest.

      Comment


        #33
        I'm sure its same everywhere.
        You'll have 5 seconds to make up your mind.
        Like a divorce, the longer the process takes the more it will cost. Transition sounds muddy and slower is my point.
        People die, kids get involved, neighbors get pushy. Any or all three.
        Be prepared to write the check that day. Far less risk.
        Don't make taxes your first decision filter.

        Comment


          #34
          And because of inflation over time.
          Every 30 yr old needs some debt.
          There is no standing still.
          Only moving ahead or falling behind.

          Comment


            #35
            Buying land today involves having faith that the government will not lose control of the market. All of the land price increases have been purely due to fakenomics. What happened in the 1980's was due to the realization that there would be hyper inflation if the central banks did not stop the money printing. They stopped printing and you know what happened next. Today of course is the same situation. They will not stop printing but will the market force them to do so? Market forces will push land down like the 80's because fundamentals are all bearish: increasing competition from the black sea and once the $usdx heads higher our customers like china and India can't borrow to eat anymore. We are currently seeing an inflationary blip due to covid printing in a deflationary macro environment. Anyways you will be buying the high and as governments around the world lose influence over their economies there is nowhere but down to go. Interest rates are heading higher as it will take even more printing to keep them down as debt demand goes hyperbolic. Will the US go to where the Fed buys all the debt? In canuskistan we are just about there already with the Bank of Canada being the only buyer of new debt. That said if the land next to me was for sale I would try hard to get it and would sell land further out to get it if possible. Offered for some land a few miles away recently that has been for sale for 2 years but am not prepared to go higher as it is marginal land. Some other land we offered for 3 years ago was sold internally to family this spring but the buyers want to flip that land again as well and this is in AB. Land prices are not as high as the local rumor mill has it either.

            Comment


              #36
              Land here went up some in the seventies. Then it crashed in the 80’s. And stayed crashed for 30 years. How old will you be in 30 years if it happens again?

              I worry about today’s sustainability in ag. I don’t think it is sustainable. In several ways. If land hadn’t taken this run up, I can’t imagine the equipment and bins etc, that would not have been bought with high land values. When most farm growth is fuelled by land value increases alone, it is a bit worrying. My own banker told me this spring, it isn’t farm income buying the land, it is paid for land, wives jobs, grandpas kindness, dads co-signing, that is buying the land. It is most certainly not the kids buying it alone and on their own. His words, not mine.

              Now, you have to make your own decision on buying neighboring land. Each farm has different financial issues. We don’t know yours. Flush farmers will always say buy buy buy. I am not flush so have a different view.

              How flush are you? How many millions of debt are you cozy with? Do you have to buy it all? Do you have to buy it to remain feasible? Is it really needed, or is it that having someone else buy it will drive you crazy?

              I bough a section of adjoining land before the run up. Thankful for it. Had I not gotten it, i would have not been close to feasible. So I felt I needed to buy it. If prices then, were as they are now, I’m thinking I would have had to be a farmer in the footnote of history, because I simply couldn’t afford land at these prices. And these prices are way lower than most areas are.

              If land dropped in half, WHEN it drops in half, it wouldn’t affect me, because I didn’t base my future on high land values, nor did I borrow against land equity to buy anything.

              Land could drop in half. Don’t kid yourself.

              Make your own decision, not rely on a forum, with a bunch of wealthy farmers. Use your own reality. Not theirs.

              Comment


                #37
                We are in a situation where I am desperate for an opportunity to grow but there is nothing on the horizon. There was hope when interest rates were rising a year ago but now due to covid money printing it will not happen while I am young enough to do something with it. On the mediocre parcels there are no other buyers just the phenomenal greed of the sellers to compete with which has been rewarded by the aforementioned fakenomics.

                Comment


                  #38
                  My thoughts on buying land, and the price cycles.

                  You have no control over when you were born.
                  You only live once.
                  You probably won't live long enough to experience 2 price cycles.
                  Will need to find a way to make it work at the prices available when you are young and ambitious enough to make it work, and the banks are willing to lend.

                  Comment


                    #39
                    Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                    My thoughts on buying land, and the price cycles.

                    You have no control over when you were born.
                    You only live once.
                    You probably won't live long enough to experience 2 price cycles.
                    Will need to find a way to make it work at the prices available when you are young and ambitious enough to make it work, and the banks are willing to lend.
                    I agree on the price cycle and depending on when you were born.
                    I believe (in Sask anyways) there has been (at least) 4 events that have changed the price cycle.

                    1- Land in Sask was lagging a long way behind world trends and values.
                    2- The end of the CWB (good or bad please don’t turn this into a CWB thing) which allowed access to markets for people to sell product to service debt, in a timely manner.
                    3- Enter investors and Investment companies who are looking for a return on money and hopefully some capital appreciation. Right now they are on the sidelines but I think a 15-25% land price correction and they’ll be back big time.
                    4- Historically low interest rates


                    In my opinion these events have thrown the price cycle into turmoil, and I don’t know what the normal price cycle is any longer. I didn’t think the run up in prices could last this long or reach these levels.

                    Comment


                      #40
                      Tell me this if land prices go to infinity measured in dollars and so does a banana what is the value of your land?

                      Comment


                        #41
                        Flea, just a few questions you have ask yourself, and things to consider IF any of this applies to you.

                        If your in your 30's, your parents are more than likely still involved. Are you the only one entitled to the farm or are there other siblings going to farm with you or are they entitled to some of the farm through inheritance.

                        If you are the only one entitled to the farm and will not have to be buy out siblings, and your parents are willing to help out on the farm for the next 10 years, (which is very important) it's more than likely do able. At some point are your parents wanting you to purchase their share of the farm out right?

                        Again I don't know your situation but these are issues that come up in generational farms.

                        The biggest question you have to ask yourself is, can you survive if you have multiple crop failures in a row and if the cattle (if you have any) carry the load.

                        Just trying to make you aware nothing else!

                        Comment


                          #42
                          Originally posted by STR1 View Post
                          I agree on the price cycle and depending on when you were born.
                          I believe (in Sask anyways) there has been (at least) 4 events that have changed the price cycle.

                          1- Land in Sask was lagging a long way behind world trends and values.
                          2- The end of the CWB (good or bad please don’t turn this into a CWB thing) which allowed access to markets for people to sell product to service debt, in a timely manner.
                          3- Enter investors and Investment companies who are looking for a return on money and hopefully some capital appreciation. Right now they are on the sidelines but I think a 15-25% land price correction and they’ll be back big time.
                          4- Historically low interest rates


                          In my opinion these events have thrown the price cycle into turmoil, and I don’t know what the normal price cycle is any longer. I didn’t think the run up in prices could last this long or reach these levels.
                          I believe you missed the biggest influence on Saskatchewan land prices: government policy on ownership. At one point only Saskatchewan residents could own farm land which kept farmland prices below that in other provinces. Even today, although foreigner individuals and corporations supposedly can own no more than 10 acres of farmland, there are multiple exemptions and appeal process which have effectively removed the 10 acre limit increasing demand for farmland and therefore price.

                          Comment


                            #43
                            To Fleabeetle

                            Go for it, with a few caveats. Don’t jeopardize what you currently have, but don’t be afraid to fail and have to sell the newly acquired land with say a 30% decrease if everything goes completely wrong.

                            There is a mindset with farmers that anyone who is optimistic, thinks land prices are going up, or thinks things are going to get better is a young whippersnapper who needs take a big loss, get humbled or even ruined. Then the old wise millionaire farmers who got their land for free can shake their wise heads and proclaim they knew this was going to happen. Don’t listen to them, anyone can succeed who inherited or bought really cheap land. For every story of someone who went broke paying too much for land there are 10 of people who paid too much at the time and now it is worth far more than they paid.

                            If that land you are looking at goes up $500 per acre over 10-15 years you are up $500,000. So what are the chances the new land bankrupts you? I am guessing extremely low, and 3% compounded over 24 years is a double. So if you keep doing what you are doing when you are 60 you’ll have made a living farming and I am guessing the land is 1000-2000 an acre so you’d be up an additional 1-2 million. Those are very attractive numbers and not only attractive but maybe the difference between the next generation staying on farm or not. If land does nothing you’ll still have the land paid for then which is nothing to sneeze at.

                            I did absolutley everything and I mean everything wrong. Just as the ridiculous wet years started, expanded way too fast, got way too big, I am sure mocked by many locals, had to sell some land and machinery to shrink farm by 1/3rd to survive. I am sure to an outsider that looks like a failure. Yet I am still far far ahead of where I would have been if I had just stayed the same size as when I when I took over because I left myself enough of a buffer. Going from 2 to 20 and then back to 10 is still way ahead of staying at 2. As long as you have a few years of payments saved up and decent equity going in I wouldn’t be afraid to pull the trigger. If you bite off more than you can chew, be quick to sell half to 2/3rds of the newly acquired land and you are still ahead. I wish you the best.

                            Comment


                              #44
                              Originally posted by foragefarmer View Post
                              Flea, just a few questions you have ask yourself, and things to consider IF any of this applies to you.

                              If your in your 30's, your parents are more than likely still involved. Are you the only one entitled to the farm or are there other siblings going to farm with you or are they entitled to some of the farm through inheritance.

                              If you are the only one entitled to the farm and will not have to be buy out siblings, and your parents are willing to help out on the farm for the next 10 years, (which is very important) it's more than likely do able. At some point are your parents wanting you to purchase their share of the farm out right?

                              Again I don't know your situation but these are issues that come up in generational farms.

                              The biggest question you have to ask yourself is, can you survive if you have multiple crop failures in a row and if the cattle (if you have any) carry the load.

                              Just trying to make you aware nothing else!
                              Parents have pretty well retired with savings and no debt. They put in around 100 acres just to say they are still farming. I rent the land off of them at a very favourable family rate. Have enough to keep myself plus a hired man busy. Possibly too busy depending who you ask.

                              Have three siblings that want nothing to do with the farm. I am in the process of buying the equipment off of my parents. They are financing me and selling the equipment for what they have left in their capital cost allowance as to keep the farm strong and not give Trudeau money to waste.

                              I had a few quarters of my own, plus just bought a few more from my parents when they “retired”. (They still come most days for a few hours). The rest of the land as I understand will be split between the 4 children later on. I will most likely rent it from my siblings except possibly a few quarters from one brother.

                              I would have had minimal debt by 2025 had i not purchased the land and now the equipment off of my parents. I pretty well had my own line of equipment, but now will have doubles of most things. A few items are close to needing updating. Most are reasonably new enough to run for at least ten years.

                              The kicker here is that I was managing income tax well enough by pre buying all inputs, plus carrying grain over if need be. But now with basically doubling farm size by taking over my parents side of the farm, tax has become a major issue to be managed. Ending up carrying over 25%+ of inventory every year from the last 5 to avoid tax, plus prepaying all expenses. All the while still giving Trudeau 6 figures.

                              I think incorporation is in my future, but accountant had advised against it. Said if a child does not want to take over, it is very expensive and exhausting to wind down the business without paying more tax than if had kept it personally? I am not savvy enough to know what would happen. And I even went to get a second opinion on that, and that accountant basically just said you turn it into a holding company if no kids want to run the business. But sooner or later, that business has to be wound down, no? And he couldn’t satisfactorily answer what would happen at that point.

                              If child wants to take over, then I can see the benefit of incorporation. Seamless transition from parent to child. I just can’t get the straight answer on what happens if there is nobody to pass it on to?

                              So back to a want or a need at this point. Could live very comfortably without it. Probably more comfortably than by buying it. But not in my nature to sit around either. And...it is touching the home quarter. Some land decent, some marginal.

                              Comment


                                #45
                                Timing is everything. Opportunity varies by location obviously. Made my first purchase in 1981 at 250/acre. Some friends and family declared me certifiable, including my employer at the time. Some Dry years followed but young ambition and perseverance prevailed. Sideline as heavy duty mechanic helped not to mention some good lentil crops. 1989 purchased 1600 acres with yard we still live on as home base. Averaged 300/acre. Subsequent purchases in 95, 02, 09, 14 and 17 were all agonizing decisions at the time. Most recent acquisition was 2000/acre. Older gentleman farmer once told me while in my youth ,when given the opportunity don’t be afraid to invest in good quality farmland. Grateful for his wisdom and thankful we didn’t stand on the sidelines. Perhaps to aggressive for some. Markets and values are forever changing but solid opportunity still exists imo. Looking back, no regrets whatsoever on any purchase. Now able to reap the rewards of ownership as retirement approaches.
                                Everyone’s situation will vary but time is still our most precious commodity. Only wish we could all have more of it. Lol ( sorry for the lol).

                                Comment

                                • Reply to this Thread
                                • Return to Topic List
                                Working...