Page added on September 7, 2011
Some areas of farmland the U.S. grain belt are selling for as much as double their worth five years ago as the price of commodities continues to rise. U.S. Department of Agriculture experts argue that these values are not sustainable; however, the rising global population and growing need for food may change how farmland is valued at a fundamental level. There are several ways to invest in farmland including buying positions in large publicly traded U.S. or foreign agribusiness companies like Monsanto Company or Cosan Limited. For more on this continue reading the following article from Money Morning.
If Mark Twain was talking about investing in farmland when he suggested “buy land – they’re not making anymore,” then he knew more about finance than he’s credited with.
The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago just reported that prime farmland prices in the heart of the U.S. grain belt (Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin) – were up 17% in the second quarter compared to 2010, the biggest year-over-year increase since 1977.
That’s on top of a 12% jump for all of 2010, the second-largest yearly increase in the past 30 years.
In fact, farmland value since 2000 has appreciated by more than 1,200%, according to the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF), and netted nice profits for farmland investors.
Just look at the NCREIF’s Farmland Returns Index, which measures the quarterly performance of a large pool of individual agricultural properties acquired in the private market for investment purposes.
The index has posted some incredible quarterly gains over the past decade – most notably 22.78% and 14.63% in the fourth quarters of 2005 and 2004, respectively.
Farmland gains for the first two quarters of 2011 were recently reported at 2.40% and 1.48%.
What’s more, negative quarterly returns for farmland are extremely rare. Only once since 1992 has the NCREIF Index fallen period-over-period, and that came in the fourth quarter of 2001 amid post-9/11 economic turmoil.
Given the large value gains since 2000, a lot of potential has been realized, but there’s plenty of room for future profit.
“It’s not the first inning of the game,” Shonda Warner, managing partner at Chess Ag Full Harvest Partners, told CNBC, “but it’s not the eighth inning either.”
Farmland Prices: Plenty of Room to Grow
Rising commodity prices are the primary reason farmland values have soared. They’ve carried sales prices on recent land transactions in Iowa and Illinois to as much as $13,000 an acre – almost double what they were just five years ago.
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Chief Economist Joseph Glauber said land value increases that large may not be sustainable, but he acknowledged that steadily increasing food demand would likely prevent a major collapse in farmland prices. The USDA estimates rising global food demand will increase annual U.S. agricultural exports to roughly $113 billion by 2017 from $98.6 billion in 2009.
Annual population growth is advancing at a rate of 1.1%. That means the population of the entire planet will be 9 billion by 2050, up from about 7 billion now.
And many big-name investors are major farmland buyers, driving demand that will boost prices even higher.
Noted commodity investor Jim Rogers told CNBC he began buying farmland for both his personal and fund accounts several years ago. And numerous sources have reported that billionaire hedge-fund kingpin George Soros has been selling gold to purchase farmland blocks in various countries. One fund he controls owns 23.4% of a private South American farmland and renewable-energy conglomerate called Adecoagro.
Investment management firm BlackRock Inc. (NYSE: BLK) recently announced it had taken a multi-million dollar position in farmland in several Mid-western states.
“Farmland is a theoretically safe, income-producing, inflation-protected hedge,” former Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) strategist Barton Biggs, who now runs a hedge fund for Traxis Partners LP, told CNBC. He said it has historically provided a “rock-steady return” that he estimated at 6% to 7% annually.
Another perk for farmland investors: it has a high correlation to inflation, historically 90% to 95%. As inflation continues to soar, a good farmland investment can offset the price-gain pain.
Investing in Farmland: Six Ways to Play Now
Not everyone can quickly and easily purchase blocks of farmland. For those needing an alternative, the closest thing to a pure farmland play among exchange-traded funds (ETFs) would be the Market Vectors Agribusiness Fund (NYSE: MOO).
MOO seeks to replicate the performance of the DAXglobal Agribusiness Index, which consists of global companies engaged in agriculture business, many of which do have large farmland holdings. MOO shares are driven more by commodity prices than by land prices, so the volatility is higher – but so are the chances for relatively quick gains.
A more indirect way to play farmland values is to invest in a large U.S.-traded agribusiness company. Most own or lease large chunks of land in conjunction with their other operations.
Three you might consider are:
Two foreign-based companies that do have good liquidity and fairly easy access in the U.S. are:
One More for the Road…
Small investors may get frustrated at the lack of liquidity when investing in farmland, and no real estate investment trusts (REITs) are currently listed on U.S. exchanges – but it may be only a matter of months before there’s a pure-play farmland option available.
Gladstone Investment Corp. (Nasdaq: GAIN) filed papers in late 2010 to create a REIT based on the holdings of its Gladstone Land Corp., an externally managed investment firm that owns two large farms in California.
The properties cover about 960 acres and are leased to Dole Fresh Vegetables, a subsidiary of Dole Food Company Inc. (NYSE: DOLE), which uses them to raise strawberries and various vegetables. Gladstone is raising money to buy more land and set up a farm mortgage division, and hopes to qualify for listing as a REIT by year-end.
2 Comments on "Farmland Prices Doubling in US Heartland"
Lampert Scratch on Thu, 8th Sep 2011 4:14 am
I would invest in one hard workin’ farmer and his family before I would invest in Monsanto Corp.
DC on Thu, 8th Sep 2011 7:50 am
This article does not seem the least put out by the fact that huge mega-corporations, not actual farmers, are the ‘go to’ guys for farm land. Monsanto drove small and medium sized independents out of business or just convinced them to sell. But I guess thats ‘just business’ eh?