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Farmland Ownership Trends Shifting

Jeff Caldwell 08/06/2013 @ 9:15amMultimedia Editor for Agriculture.com and Successful Farming magazine. As farmland values have climbed over the last few years, it’s caused a slowing in a couple of key trends in who owns that land, shifts that could ultimately affect land accessibility for young and beginning farmers, according to one Iowa land values expert. Every five years, Iowa State University Extension farm management specialist Mike Duffy conducts a survey of farmland owners in his state. The survey has been conducted since the early 1980s, a time period that’s seen some major ups and downs in the land market. “The latest Iowa farmland ownership survey is compared to previous surveys dating back to 1982, during the time when farmland values first started collapsing after the boom of the 1970s,” Duffy says, adding that the full results of the survey will be released later this fall. “Looking at the various surveys over the past 30 years shows some of the changes in farming technology, demographics, and other patterns. The 2012 survey also shows the impact of the current land boom on these trends.” The sharp climb in land values since the last land ownership survey conducted in 2007 — a time when values in Iowa had more than doubled — has caused a couple of shifts in ownership that could carry implications for young and beginning farmers in the coming years, provided values are sustained. First, who’s owning the land? Last year, almost one third of Iowa farmland was in the hands of someone over the age of 75. That number has been ticking up since 1982, but just in the last five years since the sharp value climb, Duffy says there’s been a noticeable change. “The percent of land owned by people in this age category had been steadily increasing since 1982, when 12% of the land was owned by someone over 75 years old. The trend toward increasing age does appear to have been slowed by the boom,” Duffy says. “There are younger owners, although they represent a small percentage of the acres. Over half, 56%, of the farmland in Iowa is owned by someone over the age of 65.” Absentee land ownership has also declined in the last few years since the runup in land values. In 2012, 21% of the farmland in Iowa was owned by an absentee owner. That’s the same as in 2007, but up 15% from 1982. Duffy says the flattening of this number could also foreshadow a major trend shift. “Another trend that seems to have slowed is the percent of land owned by people who don’t live in Iowa full-time,” he says. “It appears that the higher land values had an impact on the ownership by non-Iowans.” These trends are important for all parties involved in farmland ownership and management, but mostly for those on the opposite ends of the age spectrum, Duffy says. This makes it important for those parties to watch them closely and take them into account in land purchase and lease agreements down the road. “Ownership of Iowa’s farmland and access to the use of the land is critical for the future of the State. The impact of the ownership on both beginning farmers and the retiring farmers will be crucial,” Duffy says. “The current situation with respect to farmland ownership in Iowa is a good topic for discussion among landlords, family or heirs, and agribusiness professionals.” Continue reading

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Farmland Values in U.S. Rise 9.4% to $2,900 Per Acre

By Alan Bjerga – Aug 2, 2013 U.S. farmland values climbed 9.4 percent this year as high prices paid for crops and livestock after last year’s drought bolstered real-estate while commodity prices fell, the Department of Agriculture said. The average value of all land and buildings on farms and ranches in the 48 contiguous states was $2,900 an acre, according to a June survey of farmers, the USDA today said in an annual report , up from $2,650 a year earlier. The drought that spread through the Corn Belt and Great Plains last year prompted record insurance payments and will push farm profits to a record $128.2 billion this year as growers rebuild inventories, the USDA said in February. The most expensive farmland was in New Jersey at $12,700 an acre, followed by Rhode Island at $11,800, according to the USDA. The cheapest was in New Mexico at $550 an acre. The Corn Belt was the most expensive of the 10 regions tracked by the USDA, averaging $6,400 an acre after gaining 15 percent from the previous year. The Mountain region had the lowest prices, averaging $1,020 per acre. The USDA will update its farm profit forecast on Aug. 27. To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Bjerga in Washington at abjerga@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jon Morgan at jmorgan97@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Greek Markets Rattled By Political Disarray

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7157a3f8-da54-11e2-a237-00144feab7de.html#ixzz2WqkGfnWs June 21, 2013 10:43 am Greek markets rattled by political disarray By Robin Wigglesworth Greek bond yields have climbed sharply as investors fret over domestic political uncertainty and an impasse between the country’s troika of official sector lenders. The benchmark 10-year bond yield of Greece rose 75 basis points to 11.6 per cent by late morning in London, while the Athens stock exchange index fell 2.9 per cent to its lowest level since early April. Greece’s small Democratic Left party could pull out of the government coalition headed by premier Antonis Samaras after the collapse of talks on resuming state television broadcasts. The abrupt shutdown of broadcaster ERT last week angered the Democratic Left’s members of parliament and caused consternation among Greece’s austerity-fatigued population. Mr Samaras said that he was determined to avoid early elections despite the row. Global markets have been rattled by the US Federal Reserve’s indication that it will start to reduce its bond-buying programme this year and end it in 2014, but most bond and stock markets regained some of their footing on Friday. In contrast, Greek bond yields have continued their ascent. Investor sentiment towards Greece is not helped by uncertainty over how to plug a funding gap in the country’s bailout programme. The FT reported on Thursday that the International Monetary Fund might suspend aid to Greece next month unless the eurozone stepped in. If the current review of the programme “is concluded by the end of July, as expected, no financing problems will arise because the programme is financed till end-July 2014”, Gerry Rice, an IMF spokesman, said in a statement. Mr Samaras’s New Democracy party and its Pasok ally jointly have 153 deputies, a slender majority in the 300-member parliament. But the departure of the Democratic Left would be a blow to a government that still has to impose deep public spending cuts and oversee a large privatisation programme. Greek bond yields have tumbled for much of the past year as hedge funds bet the debts will be spared in another overhaul of Athens’ debt burden – most likely after the German elections later this year. Continue reading

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