Tag Archives: real estate
Analysis: Despite Talk Of Farm Bubble, Farmer Mac Woos Investors
By David Randall NEW YORK | Mon Sep 23, 2013 (Reuters) – Farmer Mac – the farm loan equivalent of its cousins Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae – owes its existence to the last time a U.S. farm bubble burst. Now, the company is trying to convince investors it would survive another one. The market isn’t giving the company a vote of confidence yet. Just five years ago, Farmer Mac had to be rescued by its creditors after its large positions in Lehman Brothers and Fannie Mae went sour. Now, the revived company must prove to skeptical investors that it can withstand a sharp decline in the price of farmland that analysts expect to come in the next year. That open question – and the inability of Congress to pass an updated five-year farm bill, which provides crop insurance and other subsidies that farmers rely on – has been weighing on the company’s stock price. Shares of Federal Agricultural Mortgage Co. ( AGM.N ) – a government-sponsored enterprise that functions as a secondary market for farm, rural utility and rural development loans – are up approximately 6 percent for the year and 35 percent over the last 12 months. This year has seen a widespread market rally that has pushed the benchmark Standard and Poor’s 500 index up more than 20 percent. After collapsing to around $3 in late 2008, the stock price has since recovered to pre-crisis levels of around $34. Still, the stock trades at a price to earnings ratio of 5.5, close to half the valuation of small lenders like PennyMac Financial Services ( PFSI.N ) and of its own five-year average P/E of 10.1, according to Thomson Reuters data. The company has been actively courting small-cap fund managers, institutions and endowments by pitching itself as a conservative way to play the booming U.S. farm sector. In February, for instance, the company presented at the Bank of America/Merrill Lynch Global Agriculture Conference in Miami, and in April it gave a presentation to the California Municipal Treasurers Association. In all, it has made seven presentations to potential investors in New York, Baltimore, San Francisco and other locations this year. At all the events, chief executive Timothy Buzby argued that a decline in farm prices would not affect his company as much as the market expects. Farmers can always sell a few hundred acres of a larger farm or their excess equipment before defaulting, he said. “We only make real estate loans, not operation loans. If there’s a bursting of a bubble, the last lender to get hurt is the one who has the loan on the farm,” he said. He points to the company’s low 0.01 percent default rate and the fact that the firm “lost zero” during last year’s drought – the most extensive in at least 25 years – as evidence of the resilience of the sector. RUN-UP IN PRICES The widespread concerns that farmland is a bubble ready to pop comes from an unprecedented run-up in prices. Between 2003 and 2013, the average acre of farmland in the U.S. jumped 213 percent in non-inflation adjusted dollars, according to research by Brent Gloy, an agricultural economist at Purdue University, an average annual increase of 12 percent. By comparison, prices rose 127 percent in real terms between 1971 and 1981, a rally that ended in the late 1980s farm crisis when land prices tumbled 40 percent. That steep decline brought down several community banks and led Congress to create Farmer Mac. “If prices don’t start to slow down soon, that would be a major red flag,” said Gloy. Farmer Mac has responded by tightening its lending standards and the portfolio’s loan-to-value ratio has fallen to 60 percent from 70 percent, Buzby said. That has helped the 90-day delinquencies rate in its farm and ranch portfolio fall to 0.69 percent of loans in the second quarter of 2013, compared with a 1.30 percent delinquency rate in the same quarter of 2010. Freddie Mac , by comparison, reported that 2.79 percent of its loans were seriously delinquent at the end of 2012. Over the same time, Farmer Mac’s core capital rose to $564 million from $461 million. The company has also tightened its own standards for its liquidity portfolio, said Buzby, who became chief executive of the company in 2012. The prior management team was using the portfolio to boost earnings , he said. When its large position in Lehman tanked, the company was forced to sell $65 million in preferred shares to its lenders as part of a rescue plan. Most of the portfolio is now invested in low-yielding U.S. Treasuries, Buzby said, meaning that the company is losing money on its capital after inflation. Like other government-sponsored enterprises, the company has the implicit backing of the U.S. government, but does not offer the same level of security as a Treasury bond. To be sure, the company remains highly leveraged, like other government-sponsored enterprises. The company has a leverage rate of approximately 25 to 1. While that has fallen from a peak of 45 to 1 before the 2008 crisis, it remains higher than regional banks , which typically have leverage rates of 12 to 1. “When you talk about what you could be concerned about as an investor in this company, that would certainly figure into the analysis,” said one hedge fund manager whose fund owns shares of Farmer Mac and who did not want to be quoted by name. VALUE PLAY Some value investors who own the stock say that the company has stronger fundamentals than the market is giving it credit for. “If you look at the leverage within the farm system, it’s not nearly as high (as in residential mortgages) and it isn’t going out of whack like the residential space was,” said Howard Lu, a portfolio manager with First Wilshire, a Pasadena, California-based money management firm with $650 million in assets under management which owns Farmer Mac stock. The Kansas City Fed estimates that the debt to asset ratio in the farm sector is currently around 10 percent, well below the 25 percent mark associated with the collapse of the 1980s. By comparison, debt to asset ratios topped 25 percent in the residential mortgage sector leading up to the 2008 financial crisis. Lu said that the company is still “significantly” undervalued because of its earnings growth. Farmer Mac reported core earnings of $1.48 per share in its most recent quarter, a 27.9 percent gain from the same period last year. The company is little followed by Wall Street, in part because its market cap is so small that large-asset funds can’t invest much more than $20 million in the company without becoming a significant holder in the shares and distorting prices. As a result, its shareholders tend to be small mutual funds and hedge funds. The one analyst polled by Reuters who covers the company, Evan Hutto at Compass Point, rates it a buy, with a target price of $42, a roughly 25 percent increase from its current price of approximately $34. New York-based Sidoti & Company initiated coverage Wednesday with a price target of $44. Hutto looks for positive price moves after Congress passes a farm bill and when concerns abate that Farmer Mac will be hurt by falling farm prices. Rising interest rates could also push Farmer Mac’s loan volumes higher. Unlike Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, Farmer Mac has largely been exempt from Republican bills that would unwind government-sponsored enterprises. “This is a company that’s had tremendous growth but has been falling under the radar,” Hutto said. “Now they need to prove that they’re for real.” (Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Claudia Parsons) Continue reading
UAE seen to rise in asset wealth rankings
UAE seen to rise in asset wealth rankings Staff Report / 22 September 2013 The UAE is expected to be the highest climber over the coming decade as its built asset wealth is expected to grow by two per cent, moving the country up two places to 23rd in the global rankings. This was stated by Flash Properties based on recent findings of the Global Built Asset Wealth Index, which quantifies the accumulated wealth of 30 countries’ built assets and is conducted by EC Harris in conjunction with the Centre for Economic and Business Research. According to this index, when it comes to built asset wealth per person, the UAE comes 12 th in the global rankings, with an estimated built asset wealth of $122,809 per person, while Saudi Arabia is in 15 th place with $72,861. The rankings were highlighted on the sidelines of the announcement by Flash Properties of its participation in Cityscape Global, the Middle East’s largest and most influential international real estate event, taking place from October 8 to 10 at the Dubai World Trade Centre. Tanzeel Gader, chief executive officer of Flash Properties, said: “The recent findings of Global Built Asset Wealth Index by analysing the accumulated wealth of 30 countries’ built assets — encompassing all the property and infrastructure that contributes to economic productivity — is a true indicator of the great potential of the UAE’s real estate market. The country is investing aggressively in its built environment and this opens the door wide for more sustained growth of the real estate market.” “With more than Dh5.5 billion worth of transactions recorded by the current Dubai real estate market, is appears that 2013 will be the year of revival for real estate industry, on the back of renewed confidence of global and regional investors.” abdulbasit@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
New Funds: September 9
http://www.ft.com/cm…l#ixzz2fQo4q0Qj ● Host Capital has launched what it claims to be the UK’s first fully authorised and domiciled currency fund. Its Global Currency fund, structured as an Oeic and aimed at discretionary wealth managers and IFAs, will follow the output of the six systematic strategies that comprise the Citi Carry & Value index. ● Prestige Fund Management and Methexis Capital have joined forces to create Commercial Finance Opportunities, a fund specialising in secured lending to private UK companies. The Luxembourg Sicav is available to experienced investors with at least €125,000 to spare. ● Legal & General Investments has unveiled five risk-targeted multi-asset funds that will gain exposure to equities, bonds and property through a series of in-house passive funds, keeping the annual management charge to just 0.25 per cent. ● Invesco Perpetual is also launching its first multi-asset strategy, the IP Global Targeted Returns fund. The vehicle, managed by a newly assembled team, will target a gross return of 5 percentage points above UK Libor on a rolling three-year basis. ● Cordea Savills has unveiled its first German Spezialfonds. Real Invest 1 raised €65m from a group of German insurers before its first close and will buy offices or mixed-use buildings in the seven largest German cities. ● France’s Zencap Asset Management has launched a fund investing in mezzanine real estate debt across western Europe. ● Investec Asset Management has registered a selection of its Global Strategy fund range in Belgium. ● Over in ETF land, State Street Global Advisors’ SPDR arm has listed three short-duration bond ETFs in London and Frankfurt. ● Vanguard has listed its US Dividend Appreciation Index ETF, as well as a Canadian dollar-hedged version, in Toronto. ● db x-trackers has unveiled a US dollar-hedged version of its MSCI Japan Index Ucits ETF in London. Continue reading




