I say this to people ALL THE TIME!!!!! When it was $______ …. Any price u can point to in past- “too expensive”. “I dont dare pull the trigger”. “Not enough ROI”. Folks said EXACTLY the same thing 24 years ago when prices were possibly the most attractive. & back then- I remember some land being around a grand & no one would farm it so had no cash flow. Exact scenario of my first farm- no one would rent it “corn is $1.50. I’ll plant it if I can farm it for free” was the best I could do on 80 acres with 35 acres of mediocre tillable. It was wild when 3-4 years later someone offered me $70/acre to rent it!
I agree we are trending towards “pay to play”. 10000% agree. At the same time on the other side of that coin…. As a landowner … I’ve got a pile of farms I let others hunt. I CANNOT get folks to help on farms & put in meaningful work. Maybe a day here or there. Most farms folks own, letting others hunt would result in this much help on the farm… ZERO. I would be way better off leasing it out to hunters but I just won’t do that. No one wants to work & put in time. This isn’t just me talking- this is most farmers & landowners I know. When fall comes around - people miraculously have tons of free time!!!!!
. Winter, spring & summer- crickets. So….. for those who actually would help a landowner out. Maybe it’s building fence & gates. Or spraying noxious weeds. Or whatever skill u have (mechanical, carpentry, electrical, whatever)…. Anyone who would just show up and put in substantial help could get places to hunt. Maybe 1% of folks do it. & I understand- it’s easier to just: knock on the door, stroke a lease check or jump around as u have to keep options open …. I get it. But folks who can use their skills, time or work to help LO’s…. Way more opportunity than anyone can imagine. Always a way to do it.
It's crazy to think of a day when someone wouldn't pay rent for tillable and just a few years later it's up to $70 per acre. Wild times!
It can be such a big purchase for most that I can imagine some may never feel great about pulling the trigger with the way things pencil out at any single point in time. If someone is going to wait around for 2000 valuations they probably won't see it in this lifetime.
I like to look at historical ROI because I think it paints a clear picture that some years are undeniably better than others for buying ground. It quantifies what you posted about market cycles.
It was an interesting exercise to see what the same inflation-adjusted high-income earner could buy at given points in time.
Here's another interesting one I just ran using Claude AI. I decided to take loans/interest rates out of it and just look at a cash buyer. I ran Iowa State's data set going back to 1950 for Decatur County farmland. Here's the purchasing power of $720K inflation-adjusted from 2023 back 1950. We can definitely see the market cycles. An inflation adjusted $720K has never before bought so few acres. The historical mean $720K inflation-adjusted dollars could buy is 425 acres and the median is 491. It's currently as low as it has ever been.
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Of course there are many factors that would suggest this should happen to some degree over time but historical numbers would suggest that we'll likely see an increase in that inflation-adjusted purchasing power at some point. The key factors that will probably never make it like the "good old days"
- They aren't making more of it.
- Market is more efficient
- Likely an ever-increasing number of people competing for it
- Farmland is more productive today (but if you are just going to put it up for cash rent it seems you are worse off than in past years...anecdotally at least)
- So many other variables we don't even know to consider
Income on a % basis seems to matter less than I'd anticipate when it comes to what people will pay for farmground.
If anyone is interested here is the Rolling 10, 20, 30 Year annualized return (land prices only) going back to 1950:
10 Year:
https://claude.site/artifacts/6e046f3b-3df9-4731-ac20-e7a9c3bfcf86 (Mean 6.73% & Median 6.32%).... not too shabby!
20 Year:
https://claude.site/artifacts/07200961-a625-4b90-b964-87226f4ae30e (Mean 6.14% & Median 7.40%)
30 Year:
https://claude.site/artifacts/bd2ecabe-e024-4ef6-860e-625cc073dde0 (Mean 5.51% & Median 5.01%)
Here is the best and worst years for each rolling period (Annualized):
https://claude.site/artifacts/c191b21c-31b7-45c6-a692-428329433c54