Southern Midwest Farmland Values Mixed In Second Quarter

 | Aug 19, 2015 07:15AM ET

Farmland values across the southern Midwest were mixed over the last quarter as weak grain prices and lower expected farm income continue to weigh on the Corn Belt. The overall credit condition was reported slightly weaker as respondents continued to report a widening divide between lower loan repayment rates and increased demand for new loans, loan extensions and renewals. Survey respondents were less confident about farmland values in the third quarter, as lower crop prices and emerging stress in the farm economy have affected the overall economic outlook.h3 Farmland Values/h3

Farmland value reports from the Kansas City and St. Louis Federal Reserve’s showed mixed, although stable, results over the second quarter of 2015. The Kansas City Fed, surveying across the southern and western Corn Belt, reported irrigated cropland values steady over the last quarter, although non-irrigated farmland values declined more than 4%. Year-over-year, nonirrigated cropland declined 2.8% and irrigated cropland declined 3.6%. The largest declines were in Nebraska and Missouri, while Oklahoma and the Mountain states saw a slight increase in values.

h3 Kansas City Federal Reserve Quarterly Farmland Values/h3