Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values

This study initially presents historical trends in both the capitalized value and market value of farmland in the eight states comprising the Corn Belt and Lake States production regions as defined by the USDA. An econometric analysis of annual real cash rents per acre prior to determining the capit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gao, Bo 1988-
Other Authors: Penson, John B
Format: Others
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148223
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1482232013-03-16T03:51:41ZStress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland ValuesGao, Bo 1988-Econometric AnalysisStress TestingDistributed Lag ModelFarmlandCapitalized ValueThis study initially presents historical trends in both the capitalized value and market value of farmland in the eight states comprising the Corn Belt and Lake States production regions as defined by the USDA. An econometric analysis of annual real cash rents per acre prior to determining the capitalized value of farmland in the eight states is then conducted. Two distributed lag models were hypothesized. The comparison of regression results of these two distributed lag models indicates that current year real cash rent can be best explained by current year real net farm income, lagged real net farm income over a period of years, and real cash rent in the previous year. A spreadsheet simulation model is used to project capitalized farmland values in each state as well as regional averages over the 2012-2015 period. These projections reflect alternative assumptions regarding future trends in real net farm income at the state level as well as the rate on 10-year constant maturity U.S. government bonds to assess the potential sensitivity of capitalized farmland values under adverse economic conditions. The projected trends in capitalized farmland values under two alternative stress scenarios reflecting higher interest rates levels and lower net farm income levels indicates that capitalized farmland values are particularly sensitive to interest rate fluctuations since cash rent expectations of landlords are based on current and lagged historical profit performance.Penson, John B2013-03-14T16:17:09Z2012-122012-11-12December 20122013-03-14T16:17:09ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148223
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Econometric Analysis
Stress Testing
Distributed Lag Model
Farmland
Capitalized Value
spellingShingle Econometric Analysis
Stress Testing
Distributed Lag Model
Farmland
Capitalized Value
Gao, Bo 1988-
Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
description This study initially presents historical trends in both the capitalized value and market value of farmland in the eight states comprising the Corn Belt and Lake States production regions as defined by the USDA. An econometric analysis of annual real cash rents per acre prior to determining the capitalized value of farmland in the eight states is then conducted. Two distributed lag models were hypothesized. The comparison of regression results of these two distributed lag models indicates that current year real cash rent can be best explained by current year real net farm income, lagged real net farm income over a period of years, and real cash rent in the previous year. A spreadsheet simulation model is used to project capitalized farmland values in each state as well as regional averages over the 2012-2015 period. These projections reflect alternative assumptions regarding future trends in real net farm income at the state level as well as the rate on 10-year constant maturity U.S. government bonds to assess the potential sensitivity of capitalized farmland values under adverse economic conditions. The projected trends in capitalized farmland values under two alternative stress scenarios reflecting higher interest rates levels and lower net farm income levels indicates that capitalized farmland values are particularly sensitive to interest rate fluctuations since cash rent expectations of landlords are based on current and lagged historical profit performance.
author2 Penson, John B
author_facet Penson, John B
Gao, Bo 1988-
author Gao, Bo 1988-
author_sort Gao, Bo 1988-
title Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
title_short Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
title_full Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
title_fullStr Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
title_full_unstemmed Stress Testing Projected Capitalized Farmland Values
title_sort stress testing projected capitalized farmland values
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148223
work_keys_str_mv AT gaobo1988 stresstestingprojectedcapitalizedfarmlandvalues
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