Tag Archives: real-estate

U.S. Farmland Market Cooling Entering Key Auction Season

By Christine Stebbins CHICAGO, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 2:03pm EDT (Reuters) – The red-hot rush for U.S. grain land is cooling after years of record prices, but prime acreage is still attracting top dollar in the heart of the Corn Belt so far this fall, according to land auctioneers. “On higher quality land it’s been pretty strong steady, but on medium and lower quality land we’ve seen some pullback,” said Randy Hertz, CEO of Iowa-based Hertz Farm Management. “There’s a lot of uncertainty out here in terms of what the future holds.” The key season for U.S. farmland sales is October through December, when Midwest and Plains grain farmers are rolling in harvest cash and planning their taxes. Most economists and bankers say it is too early to tell if land values have peaked. “We’ve peaked for right now unless the grain markets rebound sharply, when it might change things and go the other direction. But right now I think is probably a leveling off period,” said Eric Mueller, an auctioneer and broker at Omaha-based Farmers National, the largest farm management company in the country. Recent farmland sales from Ohio to Nebraska have ranged from about $3,000 an acre up to $16,000 for top quality ground. While prices are strong the rate of gain has eased from 2012 when prices jumped 20 percent to 30 percent. “Interest rates are creeping up a little. But, ultimately, I think the biggest factor is grain. There’s still a lot of money out there, but buyers are going to be a little bit less aggressive with the grain markets coming down,” Mueller said. “The sentiment is holding in Nebraska and Iowa.” Corn prices are down 30 percent since last fall on the outlook for a record harvest. But corn revenues this year are still seen strong with higher yields after last year’s drought. “Frankly the last 10 years have been phenomenal. It’s off-the-chart good,” said Brent Gloy, an agricultural economist with Purdue University. “It looks like to me this is the first time we’ve seen some substantial headwinds in the market for a while.” Chicago Board of Trade December corn on March 1 was $5.57, but closed at $4.57 on Thursday. A year ago, the price was $6.20. “If it becomes obvious that corn prices are going to shake out below $4 in the $3 range, we’re at a peak,” Gloy said. “The lower commodity prices are hard to justify the really high land prices we’ve been seeing. If you take high quality farmland in Indiana, if you get much over $10,000 an acre, you’ve got to have cash rents over $300 an acre, in some cases $400 or $500. If corn prices are below $5, it’s going to be hard to pay those rents.” Bankers and economists watch farm land prices closely. Land represents 85 percent of farmer assets – and loan collateral. Federal Reserve banker surveys for the quarter ended in June cited lower rates of gain in land prices. At the same time, bankers cautioned farmers against chasing price dips with borrowed money, dreading another 1980s farm debt crash. “The difference with the 1980s is that 75 percent of land then had mortgages. Today, 25 percent does,” said Jeff Obrecht, an Iowa-based real estate broker with Farmers National. “That makes a big difference. We just don’t have the debt out there that we had. Part of that is lenders are requiring more. If you buy at $10,000 acre, you’re going to have to put $5,000 down.” Auctioneers said that, in recent weeks, more ‘no sales’ have been reported at Midwest auctions as buyers think through revenue, cash and borrowing fundamentals. “When I sold a piece a property two years ago for $14,600 we got there in less than 5 minutes,” said Bruce Huber of Hickory Point Bank in Decatur, Illinois. “Some of these auctions are taking longer, fewer bidders. You can just tell the enthusiasm for the higher prices seems to be wanting yet the prices are still there.” So as land auctions pick up starting in October, auctioneers are expecting some price resilience. “Farmers buy about 70 percent of the farms in the Midwest,” said Hertz. “They’ve got cash, there are record amounts of cash. That cash at a bank or short-term deposits doesn’t pay much – essentially, less than 1 percent. Compare that to a farm that can earn 3-4-5 percent.” (Reporting by Christine Stebbins.; Editing by Andre Grenon) Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, News, Property, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on U.S. Farmland Market Cooling Entering Key Auction Season

Global Farmland Offers Potential For Asset Deals

As the world’s population swells beyond seven billion and emerging markets’ appetite for food grows, Canadian institutions are getting increasingly hungry for agribusiness and farmland acquisitions abroad. Canada’s pension funds have long been putting their money into mining, energy and infrastructure, and more recently luxury retail brands, but now many are snapping up swathes of arable land or creating special investment vehicles to explore opportunities in agriculture. “We’ve seen this uptick in interest in investing in agricultural assets, and, I think the growing importance of food production overall in the world,” says Grant Jameson, who heads up the Canadian agribusiness practice at Norton Rose Fulbright. Canadian institutions, tired of the lacklustre returns in the market, are seeking options with better yields than gold and government bonds, such as agriculture, experts say. As the global standard of living rises, so too does consumer desire for different and fresher types of food, says Jeff Barnes, a partner at Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Toronto. “As people get more flush, one of the small luxuries is to look a little wider for their food. And that’s going to feed agribusiness.” This year, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board launched its agriculture investment program, and made its first direct farmland investment in a portfolio of U.S. farmland. “These assets have historically delivered stable risk-adjusted returns but, more importantly, the outlook in the global agricultural market in the coming decades is positive due to increasing demand for a wide variety of agricultural products as populations and incomes rise in emerging economies,” CPP’s 2013 annual report states. CPP’s initial focus will be the U.S., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, it added. Meanwhile, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Fund at the beginning of this year created a “natural resources” investment asset class. Teachers says it will look for “new opportunities in oil and gas and agriculture.” Last year, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and British Columbia Investment Management Corp. joined with U.S. financial services company TIAA-CREF to create a global agriculture investment vehicle, with $2-billion earmarked to buy farmland in the U.S., Australia and Brazil. In 2011, Alberta Investment Management Corp (AIMCo), joined a forestry management firm in a $415-million acquisition of Australian timberlands — options for which chief executive Leo de Bever said included reverting it to agriculture. Farmland, with its steadily rising prices, is a tantalizing investment option – and one that provides interim income by leasing it to agricultural operations, says Mr. Barnes. “From the point of view of the investor, you are buying the land and you’re leasing it back to a farmer so you’re getting current yield,” he says. “The long-term bet is that this is an asset that people believe will be extraordinary in terms of how much it increases in value.” Canadian farmland values have risen steadily over the last decade, according to Farm Credit Canada, but spiked last year. During the second half of 2012, prices on average rose 10%, which is the highest since the organization began tracking farmland prices in 1985. The cost of farmland across the country in 2013 is at record highs, according to real estate firm RE/MAX, with low inventory pushing up supply in 15 out of the 17 rural markets it tracks. The greatest upswings were in Saskatchewan and Alberta. For example, the price per acre in east central Saskatchewan was $850-$2,500 in 2013, up from $650-$1,250 just two years earlier, RE/MAX said. The price hikes in southwestern Ontario have been particularly steep, according to farmland appraiser Valco. The average rate of increase over 10 counties has been roughly 25% per year since 2010. Land can cost upwards of $15,000 per acre. Farmland values across the globe between 2002 and 2010 have risen up to 1,800%, according to the Global Farmland Index compiled by U.K.-based real estate firm Savil. The biggest upswings have been in emerging markets, such as Romania and Hungary, it said. But the fact that prices have escalated so rapidly is a problem for potential investors, says AIMCo’s Mr. de Bever. He wonders whether the investment potential for farmland has run its course. He explains that the rationale for investing in land is that, with rising demand for protein in the Far East, existing landstock will become more valuable. Yet he points out that land values operate on a long cycle, and that the recent run up in value has been compressed into a short timeframe. “It’s not clear to me that any increase in farm prices is going to be rewarded with an appropriate return.” Still, Mr. de Bever says AIMCO, and other investors, will keep an eye out for farmland acquisitions — albeit a cautious one. “My guess is that there is still going to be quite a bit of demand. My concern is that I would be very picky and make sure that you’re buying right.” Mr. Barnes expects Saskatchewan to remain attractive, where land parcels are larger and the prices are a bit better. Australia remains attractive too, given the similarity in governing structures, compared to places with more instability such as Africa, he says. Other factors that will influence future demand include the trend of using technology to convert unsuitable land into arable land, in parts of South America, Mr. de Bever says. Some parts of Africa will emerge as better investment possibilities once they stabilize politically. “It is one of the areas where you will for the next while see a lot of growth,” Mr. Barnes says. “Whether it will be ticked with pluses and minuses, I don’t know. But it’s certainly an area that is very much in the front of peoples’ minds, especially since other hard commodities like metals are not so much in the front of their mind right now.” Financial Post Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, News, Property, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Global Farmland Offers Potential For Asset Deals

UK Property: More Burnt Fingers Or 2013’s Standout Investment?

23 September 2013 | By Jon Yarker Speculation that UK commercial property could prove to be the investment standout of 2013 is gaining momentum as investors return to UK property funds. Many investors had their fingers burnt with commercial property when the financial crisis broke. The average fund in the IMA Property sector, for example, dropped by 50 per cent between the peak at the start of 2007 and its trough two years later. However, the sector has shown signs of recovery and is currently almost 70 per cent up from its 2009 trough. Meanwhile, investors seem to be more interested in the space, with the IMA Propery being the fifth bestselling sector in August with net retail sales of £140m – the highest since July 2010. F&C UK Property fund manager Guy Glover suggested earlier in the year that commercial property could be one of the best-performing asset class of 2013 after considering where its fundamentals are relative to other asset classes. Investors’ search for income, when combined with the relatively low valuations within commercial property, which are still around 35 per cent below their pre-crisis levels, could see the asset class garner more interest in the months ahead, he argues. “At the time [of my prediction], 10-year gilts were delivering 2 per cent and property income return was coming through at 6.5 per cent,” Glover says. “You’re looking at corporate bonds at 4 per cent, equities with a 3 per cent yield and you see commercial property is double or treble some of other asset classes and people are out there screaming for income.” Data has been improving with the IPD UK Monthly Property Index showing commercial property made total return of 0.9 per cent in August – contributing to a total increase of 5.5 per cent over 12 months. Recently Henderson head of multi-asset Bill McQuaker has bulked up his exposure to property – increasing this to 9.4 per cent in the group’s Core 3 and Core 4 portfolios. Accessing the asset class through the £1bn Henderson UK Property fund and the £864m Legal & General UK Property trust, McQuaker says: “I believe by the close of 2013 commercial property will have been one of the more positive and fresh stories of the year. “It is providing a decent income stream and some inflation protection, with the average fund yielding circa 6 per cent according the IPD. We are not anticipating really strong performance in capital growth terms but it does have the potential to make some gains.” Legal & General Property director of research Rob Martin shares in the improving sentiment around UK property and is optimistic this will continue. Martin says: “Economic data has been surprising on the upside and forecasters have upgraded growth expectations. “One of the drivers is the gap between yield on real estate and funding from banks. There is now more credit available from lenders. The US market has become quite competitive from a loan perspective. This has meant substantial changes to loans in the UK.” With a greater proportion of the market becoming financeable, Martin sees opportunities but admits this increase in investor appetite has been surprising: “We did not account for robust recovery in investor sentiment.” However, when it comes to accessing UK property there are certain issues investors need to get to grips with. Hargreaves Lansdown head of financial planning Danny Cox admits there is potential in the UK property market but does not see open-ended funds as the best way to get access. Cox says: “We need to look at the history of property funds. They once experienced a huge amount of cash flowing into them and as money came in it became difficult to restrict flows – then they started buying properties for the wrong reasons. “I do not think open-ended funds are stable for this asset.” Bestinvest managing director of business development & communications Jason Hollands, who likes the Henderson UK Property fund due to its London and south-east England bias, does see property as an attractive asset class. However, he points to the fact that even if property yields are attractive, closed-ended funds have the potential to erode this due to their hefty price tags. Hollands says: “Our neutral view is that closed-ended structures are the better way to do this. But some of them are trading at very big premiums. “The £1.1bn F&C Commercial Property trust is one we like but it is a bit dear.” Yellowtail Financial Planning managing director Dennis Hall also prefers closed-ended structures in the form of REITs and says: “With REITs, you are not going to have to sell things because of redemptions – I would not want my manager to have to sell things. “Yes, it could be trading at a discount but the actual fund is going to be protected.” However, not all commentators believe open-ended funds should be avoided altogether. David Hambidge has recently taken the Premier multi-asset range’s allocation to commercial property to more than 11 per cent, up from around 5.5 per cent, through a combination of listed property funds, open-ended funds and some more specialist vehicles. Premier head of multi-asset research Ian Rees says: ”There is a danger that if you solely focus on the open-ended funds you may get into the liquidity issues the sector experienced a couple of years ago. “But we think it’s important to use a combination of instruments and avenue to build property exposure.” Continue reading

Posted on by tsiadmin | Posted in Investment, investments, London, News, Property, Real Estate, Taylor Scott International, TSI, Uk | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on UK Property: More Burnt Fingers Or 2013’s Standout Investment?