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Interest Expenses on Farmland Debt Could Challenge Farm Profitability

Interest Expenses on Farmland Debt Could Challenge Farm Profitability


Growth in agricultural real estate values surged during 2021 and 2022 alongside historically high farm incomes and low interest rates (Kauffman and Kreitman 2023). In 2023, farmland values held firm while interest rates increased alongside benchmark rates. Together, strong real estate valuations and higher interest rates have pushed up interest expenses on land loans, potentially squeezing profitability for crop producers.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), agricultural real estate accounts for more than 80 percent of U.S. farm sector assets, and real estate debt makes up more than 70 percent of all liabilities for the sector. Thus, an increase in interest expenses on land debt is likely to have a substantial influence on the sector. The steep increase in interest expenses is likely to be acutely burdensome for owner-operated farms with high leverage and may deter some farmers from refinancing or taking on new debt.

Notably, these increases in financing costs have occurred at a time when farm operational costs have declined. The blue line in the left panel of Chart 1 shows that total expenses for an average corn and soybean farm without new land debt stabilized in 2023.[1] The slight decline in farm expenses reflects a decline in the costs of many key inputs such as fuel and fertilizer following two years of substantial increases. However, the green and orange lines show that total expenses for an average farm with new land debt continued to rise.

The right panel of Chart 1 confirms that financing costs pushed up total expenses for farms with land debt. Interest expenses per acre grew during 2023 alongside higher interest rates, particularly for operations with large amounts of new debt. The green line shows that a farm with new or refinanced land debt totaling 40 percent of the value of all operated acres—that is, a 40 percent loan-to-value (LTV) ratio—saw an increase in interest expenses of nearly $100 per acre from 2022 to 2023. The orange line shows that a farm with a 65 percent LTV had an increase of more than $125 per acre.

Profit opportunities thinned for all crop producers during 2023 alongside a moderation in crop prices, but those with large amounts of land debt could face additional pressures. The green line in Chart 2 shows that in 2023, a farm with a new loan with a 40 percent LTV ratio on all operated acres would likely break even selling crops at average prices, similar to a farm that rents all operated acres and has no land debt (blue line).[2] Moreover, the orange line shows that a farm with a new loan with a 65 percent LTV ratio on all operated acres would likely incur losses. According to the USDA’s Agricultural Resource Management Survey, around 45 percent of U.S. corn and soybeans farms owned all land operated in 2022, around 40 percent owned a portion of land operated but rented the remainder, and about 15 percent rented all land operated. Farms that own land can have varying debt levels and repricing schedules that influence exposure to higher interest costs. Farms with higher leverage and higher shares of newly financed land debt are likely to have the most pressure on their profit margins.

Higher interest costs are likely to weigh on both new land purchases and the incomes of borrowers refinancing existing debt. According to the Survey of Agricultural Credit Conditions, near-term repricing schedules are common on debt secured by farm real estate at commercial agricultural banks. Indeed, Chart 3 shows that commercial banks in the survey are, on average, scheduled to reprice about one-fifth of farmland loans every six months. More than half of farmland loans will assume a new interest rate over the next 18 months. Borrowers refinancing debt secured prior to 2022 will face considerably higher interest payments than when the loan was originated.

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Photo Credit: gettyimage-jamesbrey

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Categories: Kansas, Crops, Corn, Soybeans

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