The percentage benchmark

An approach sometimes used in evaluating the appropriateness of a cash rent begins with two pieces of data: land price and a desired percent return. The desired return is the current, cash return desired from farmland and does not include capital gains (losses) due to increases (decreases) in farmland prices. A $9,000 per acre farmland price and a 3 percent desired return gives a benchmark cash rent of $270 per acre ($9,000 land price x .03 return).

Besides issues associated with determining the appropriate levels of farmland prices and returns, two issues complicate using this approach. The first is that theory suggests causality runs from farmland returns to land prices and not the other way around. Increases in cash rents lead to increases in farmland prices. Similarly, decreases in cash rents lead to decreases in farmland prices. If the "market" cash rent is below the benchmark cash rent, the price of farmland simply may be too high and needs to adjust downward. In the above example, suppose the desired return is 3 percent, but the "market" cash rent is $220 per acre rather than the $270 benchmark cash rent. A 3 percent return on the farmland investment results if farmland price decreases from $9,000 per acre down to $7,333 ($220 cash rent/.03 return).

Decreasing cash rents as percentages of farmland prices

The second issue is that the desired return varies with changes in market conditions. Since the mid-1980s, cash rents as percentages of land values have decreased. For state-level averages in Illinois, cash rent as a percent of land value averaged 8 percent in 1985. From these high levels, cash rents as percentages of land values had a consistent downward trend, reaching a low of 3 percent in 2016.

This downward trend corresponds to decreases in yields on interest-bearing financial assets. For example, yields on the 10-year constant maturity Treasury note fell during the same period. Ten-year notes averaged a 10.62 percent yield in 1985, falling to 2.14 percent in 2015.

Yields on 10-year Treasury notes provide an indication of returns of competing investments to farmland. Moreover, 10-year yields provide an indicator of changes in interest rates on farm mortgages. Between 1985 and 2015, the correlation coefficient between cash rents as percentages of land values and 10-year yields is .93. When returns on interest-bearing assets are low, cash rent as a percent of land price should be expected to be low as well.

Advertisement

How long will low interest rates exist?

Interest rates have been on a declining trend from 1985 to the present, with rates being particularly low since the 2008 financial crisis. Since 2008, U.S. Federal Reserve Bank (FED) actions have been designed to encourage low interest rates.

Now a question exists on how long "low" interest rates will persist. The FED has stopped increasing its aggregate holdings of bonds and seems poised to increase rates for the federal funds rates. The aggressiveness of FED actions remains to be seen.

Even if FED begins increasing short-term rates, there are reasons to believe longer-termed rates will remain relatively low into the foreseeable future. Growth is occurring in the U.S. economy, with real gross domestic product (GDP) increasing by 2.9 percent in the third quarter of 2016. While the U.S. economy has been growing for the past several years, growth rates have not reached levels that occurred during the 1960s through 1980s. Moreover, much of the growth currently taking place does not appear to require much capital. Low demand for capital then leads to low interest rates. Furthermore, interest rates are higher in the U.S. than in many countries. For example, Germany and Japan currently have negative yields on some sovereign debt issues.

Further declines in cash rent as a percent of land price are possible given current levels of yields on 10-year Treasury notes. Currently, cash rent as a percent of land price is above the yield on the 10-year Treasury. From 1985 to 2015, cash rent as a percent of land price averaged 0.3 percent below the 10-year yield. If the negative 0.3 relationship holds in the future, cash rents as percentages of land prices could decrease to near 2 percent.

Summary

Cash rents as percentages of land prices have trended down as yields on Treasury notes have decreased. Further declines in cash rent as a percent of land price are possible. Cash rents as percentages of land prices likely will remain low as long as interest rates remain low.  end mark

References omitted but are available upon request. Click here to email an editor.

This originally appeared on the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign “farmdoc daily” website as “Cash Rent as a Percent of Farmland Price.” See the original here.

Gary Schnitkey is with the University of Illinois Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics.