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September farm prices rise on modest volumes, pushed up by dairy and arable sales; urban pressures spark Auckland and Waikato prices

Rural News
September farm prices rise on modest volumes, pushed up by dairy and arable sales; urban pressures spark Auckland and Waikato prices

There were only 110 farms sold nationwide in September, the second lowest month of 2013 behind January, amd even less than the 111 sold in August.

However, that total was still 40% more than the 77 sold in September 2012.

“The September quarter is the peak work load period for the majority of farmers and as a result farm sales for the period have been moderate”, says REINZ Rural Spokesman Brian Peacocke.

“Prices for the reduced number of sales remain steady for dairy and grazing properties, with a slight easing in the median sale price for finishing properties.  Sales volumes and prices of horticultural properties have remained constant over recent months.”

The median price for the three months to September is rising however, now up to $22,851 per hectare, 5.4% above August and 27% above the per hectare price of a year ago.

“Of note this month is the consistent level of sales for finishing properties in the lower South Island, particularly Otago and Southland, where demand for good dairy support properties remains strong,” said Peacocke. Dairy farms in Otago are selling for $44,018 per hectare while support properties are not showing the same price increases despite that demand.

Auckland and Hamilton arable farms were being sold for some remarkable per hectare prices ($270,988 in Auckland and $181,123 in the Waikato) reflecting distorting demand from urbanisation.

Similar surges are being seen for Auckland lifestyle properties.

“Of note this month is the consistent level of sales for finishing properties in the lower South Island, particularly Otago and Southland, where demand for good dairy support properties remains strong.”

Higher average prices were seen for arable, grazing and dairy units, while lower average prices were seen for finishing properties compared with those same categories in August; all others were stable.

September sales included: 
    8 arable farms,
  10 dairy farms,
  25 finishing units,
  41 grazing properties,
  17 horticultural,
    9 farms of other types

The number of sales is presented here, without the average price, because average prices bounce around dramatically depending on the size and type of business unit being sold. However, the following table sets out the median prices per hectare over the past three months, as reported by REINZ.

$/ha - September 2013   Arable Dairy Finishing Forestry Grazing Hort Special
                 
New Zealand   28,428 34,912 25,388 7,609 17,517 127,667 69,716
                 
Northland     18,474 10,095   14,242 97,799 148,839
Auckland   270,988   43,879 12,932 17,486 163,400 149,839
Waikato   181,123 45,537 44,706   18,750 82,500 640,621
Bay of Plenty   47,551 22,396 31,801 2,197 20,075 198,209  
Gisborne       15,299   5,179    
Hawkes Bay   20,867 16,476 20,258   17,207 141,636 20,649
Taranaki   40,870 35,751 178,003 1,915 33,667   907
Wang/Manawatu   37,908   21,008 2,399 12,972 18,150  
Wellington   24,118   37,906 9,178 22,809    
Nelson     20,272     17,692 105,409 69,716
West Coast     25,070     15,756    
Canterbury   48,959 35,184 27,070 17,701 20,428 38,755 28,453
Otago   24,945 44,018 10,192   16,261 33,995 66,836
Southland   37,519 35,441 20,282   19,902 457,756  

You can find current farms for sale and listed on the market here.

for more perspectives, see

Exchange rates
Commodity prices
Farm cost indexes
Interest rate trends
Rural credit aggregates
- Farm sales activity
Farms for sale
International dairy prices

for saleyard and processor price trend graphs, see

lamb
beef
deer
velvet

Farm sales

Select chart tabs

Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ
Source: REINZ

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10 Comments

No mention, I see, of how many of these sales were to foreigners

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Hmmmm - I guess this one will feature at some time in the future?

 

Chinese company Shanghai Pengxin Group has launched a takeover bid for Canterbury dairy farmer Synlait Farms, in association with two of Synlait's founders.

 

Their joint venture SFL Holdings has made a takeover offer of $85.7 million or $2.10 a share for Synlait, whose shares trade on the Unlisted market.

 

The stock has been on trading halt since October 8 and last traded at $1.60.

 

SFL Holdings is a partnership between John Penno and Juliet Maclean and New Zealand Standard Farm, which is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Shanghai Pengxin Group.

 

Last year Shanghai Pengxin bought 16 Crafar farms in the North Island for just over $200m.

 

The takeover offer is conditional on receiving acceptance from 90 per cent of Synlait Farms' shareholders and the Overseas Investment Office, Synlait Farms said. Read more

 

I am not so sure the opponents of collectively financed irrigation schemes will be as pleased as the select upfront beneficiaries when the profits created from the former's indebtedness are repatriated to foreign shores. Just makes me cringe with embarrassment - stealing from the mouths of financial babes, our rate and tax payers,  should be prohibited by law and moral code.

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http://farmlandgrab.org/22694.........slippery blighters, OIO....I, oh....dear me.

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This is indeed , very good news ... Old MacPengxin had a farm , OIEIO !

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The table shows that in September 8 farms went for sale to Arabs ...

 

... but there's no column for Chinable farms , for some reason ....

 

Regardless , however many farms were sold to foreigners , it's not nearly enough ...

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Bit of a dig GBH , but this just might help....http://www.linz.govt.nz/overseas-investment/decisions/decision-summaries/oio-decision-summaries-august-2013

under the official info act some decisions may be withheld....no points for guessing who or why.....but interesting reading retrospectively....

A good one for iconoclast to lash into.

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... a net 48 000 ha sold to foreigners from January to August .... sheeeeesh ..... it's not much is it ....

 

You reckon foreigners may be turning off us .... hope not ....

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GBH Jan to June 2013 was 109,000 H.A. alone.......bit more digging... you gotta laugh though , Ping Pong and Dang Wang on a buy up listed as 100% Australian investment...ha ha! slippery buggers.

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Thanks Christov, its hard to get an idea whats happening when you read the MSM.

Its just the continued corporatisation of the world. Five years ago I had a choice in farm transport of at least 12 companies now its down to two and one of those is struggling. We had lots of rural suppliers in our little town, at least 6 or 7, now its only PGG wrightson who have a full service, and Farmlands compete with merchandise.

 We have hugely indebted large scale farmers in the area who employ %100 Filipino workers, for all manual labour, they in turn save the money and send it home, great for our little town. The wages are minimum and the hours are maximum, who represents these workers?

 These farmers have no feeling for the land or environment, they live to maximise returns so they can pay the bank, and dream of tax free capital gain.

 Meanwhile the biggest employer in our town is Work and Income.

 We wonder why rural NZ is getting hollowed out, Joyce tells us we need more industry, low wage rural businesses, based on high cost irrigation systems that create huge environment problems in a high risk monoculture based around dairying.

  Selling NZ out from underneath us is a plan, I don't know why its the plan but its either complete stupidity or some kind of wealth transfer to corporates.

 

http://www.golemxiv.co.uk/2013/10/global-debt-global-currency/#comment-140574

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geez christov - you've outed me

Madame Lash
One of Australia's most colourful women - dominatrix and courtesan, Gretel Pinniger

 

http://www.allenandunwin.com/default.aspx?page=94&book=9781742370019

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