Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




FARM NEWS
US farm land prices surge despite drought
by Staff Writers
Audubon, Iowa (AFP) March 13, 2013


American farmers may have suffered an historic drought last year, but the price of their land is skyrocketing.

In Iowa, the US's biggest producer of corn, the land prices jumped 24 percent in 2012 and and have gained 63 percent over the last three years, according to a study by Iowa State University.

The drought and heat wave last year may have severely damaged crops, but ironically it has made crop land ever more valuable.

The higher prices for crops helped compensate for lower yields, for one thing.

Farmers also recovered some $14.7 billion in insurance payments for crop damage, a record sum.

It left farm incomes on average just three percent lower from 2011, and so lingering near their highest level in 30 years. US government forecasters expect overall farming income to gain 14 percent this year.

And that makes the land across this Midwest corn and soybean belt even more sought-after.

"Farmers have cash on hand and with low interest rates, the best place to make investments is to buy more land that they can farm to be more profitable in their operation," said Lyle Hansen, a real estate agent at Audubon, a city in western Iowa.

At an Audubon church hall on a frigid day in early March, Hansen prepared to auction a 127 acre (51.4 hectare) farm suitable for corn and soybeans, the major crops of the area. The owners were a family who wanted to sell the land following the death of their mother in the autumn.

The auctioneer, clad in a cowboy hat with shiny studs on top, spoke at a rapid-fire cadence as he took bids from three people among a small roomful of attendees.

The land ended up selling for $8,800 per acre, or $1.12 million. That was a high price, though still well below the record $21,900 per acre reached in October.

"If you are sitting on some cash, there is no better place to put it in than in agricultural land," said Marvin Jorgensen, one of the attendees, who did not bid this time.

Jorgensen bought his first land in 1949 with $5,000 lent by his father.

Now 85, he owns almost 17,000 acres around the state, which he values at around $120 million.

He never sold a single acre, even during the farm crisis of the 1980s, when a big drop in land values forced some indebted farmers out of the business.

For him, today's prices are not irrational.

"Farmers learned from the past," Jorgensen said. "A lot of the land doesn't have a lot of debt on it. So if the land market goes down, it is not going to force them into selling."

"Is this a speculative bubble that will burst like the dot.com (boom), where it will drop dramatically overnight? I don't think it will," said Mike Duffy, professor of economics at Iowa State University.

"It will be more like a tire that you put a nail in and it gradually goes down,"he said.

Then the market should become more stable, at still-high prices.

"Over the long run, Iowa farmland looks better than the S&P 500," he said, referring to the US stock market benchmark index.

.


Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FARM NEWS
EU parliament moves to 'green' Europe's farms
Strasbourg, France (AFP) March 13, 2013
European lawmakers on Wednesday approved plans for a radical overhaul of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) by capping subsidies and tying them to environmental concerns. Members of the European Parliament notably agreed a sea-change in the European Union's controversial farming subsidies - tying 30 percent of direct subsidies to respect for the environment. The measures include ... read more


FARM NEWS
Aspirin may lower melanoma risk

NIST quantum refrigerator offers extreme cooling and convenience

Researchers Solve Riddle of What Has Been Holding Two Unlikely Materials Together

Star-shaped waves spotted in shaken fluid

FARM NEWS
Boeing Ships 5th WGS Satellite to Cape Canaveral for 2013 Launch

INTEROP-7000 uses ISSI to link IP-based voice comms with legacy radio

Space race under way to create quantum satellite

Boeing Receives USAF Contract for Integrated C4ISR Targeting Solution

FARM NEWS
Grasshopper Successfully Completes 80M Hover Slam

Musk: 'I'd like to die on Mars'

Ariane 5 vehicle for next ATV resupply mission in Kourou

Vega launcher integration continues for its April mission

FARM NEWS
China city searching for 'modern Marco Polo'

Milestone for European navigation system

China targeting navigation system's global coverage by 2020

Russian GLONASS space satellite group again at full strength

FARM NEWS
Boeing, KLM Demonstrate New Technologies to Optimize Flight

Singapore in 'final stages' of evaluating F-35

Embraer urges quick resolution of US contract challenge

EU safety body certifies Airbus A400M army transporter

FARM NEWS
Quantum computing moves forward

Creating indestructible self-healing circuits

Improving Electronics by Solving Nearly Century-old Problem

UCSB physicists make discovery in the quantum realm

FARM NEWS
Significant reduction in temperature and vegetation seasonality over northern latitudes

GOCE: the first seismometer in orbit

Japan's huge quake heard from space: study

Space station to watch for Earth disasters

FARM NEWS
Little faith in China leaders' pollution promises

Dead pigs contaminating Chinese river?

Toxic gas leak in South Korea, 11 hospitalised

Japan warns about smog drifting from China




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement