Sales Slump in the Dairy Sector
Sales Slump in the Dairy
Sector
Data
released today by the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand
(REINZ) shows there were 54 less farm sales (-16.1%) for the
three months ended November 2019 than for the three months
ended November 2018. Overall, there were 282 farm sales in
the three months ended November 2019, compared to 260 farm
sales for the three months ended October 2019 (+8.5%), and
336 farm sales for the three months ended November 2018.
1,295 farms were sold in the year to November 2019, 12.8%
fewer than were sold in the year to November 2018, with
44.4% less Dairy farms, 1.6% less Grazing farms, 23.4% less
Finishing farms and the same number of Arable farms sold
over the same period.
The median price per hectare for all farms sold in the three months to November 2019 was $25,190 compared to $30,411 recorded for three months ended November 2018 (-17.2%). The median price per hectare decreased 1.7% compared to October 2019.
The REINZ All Farm Price Index rose 1.3% in the three months to November 2019 compared to the three months to October 2019. Compared to the three months ending November 2018 the REINZ All Farm Price Index fell 1.4%. The REINZ All Farm Price Index adjusts for differences in farm size, location and farming type, unlike the median price per hectare, which does not adjust for these factors.
Five of the 14 regions recorded an increase in the number of farm sales for the three months ended November 2019 compared to the three months ended November 2018 with the most notable being Canterbury (+13) and West Coast (+5). Waikato recorded the most substantial decline in sales (-31 sales) followed by Northland (-12 sales). Compared to the three months ended October 2019, ten regions recorded an increase in sales with the biggest increase being in Waikato (+8), Auckland (+7 sales) and Hawke’s Bay (+7 sales).
Brian Peacocke, Rural Spokesman, at REINZ says: “Sales data for the 3 month period ending November 2019 confirms a slight increase in volumes compared to the recent October period, but significant reduction in volumes for the same period in 2018 (-16%) and in 2017 (-11%).
“The standout feature in those numbers
relates to the dairy category, which is down 55% on the
equivalent period in 2018, and 83% on the 2017
figures.
“Given the improving forecasts in payout
for the dairy industry, an exceptionally kind winter and a
benevolent spring in most dairy regions, the reasons appear
to be three fold: -
- firstly, the inexorable
advances in compliance regulations and
costs
-
- secondly, the Achilles heel for the dairy
industry – the availability and quality of
labour
-
- thirdly, and most significantly, the
tightening of credit in the banking sector and the
apparently acknowledged directive from within the Australian
owned banks to dramatically reduce their exposure to the
dairy industry
-
-
“In the internal allocation
battle to secure funds for lending to clients, it is
reported that in comparison to the capital-demanding, lower
yielding agriculture sector, greater returns for the banks
can be generated from increased investment in the
residential and commercial sectors, hence the downward
pressure on the availability of funds for the agriculture
sector, exacerbated by the Reserve Bank requirement to
increase capital reserves.
“In the meantime, record
prices continue to be generated for output from the beef,
lamb, mutton, venison and horticulture sectors which have
also benefitted from a great spring. Accordingly, demand
for such properties remains strong.
“Contrary to
such logic, it is only the cautious dairy sector that is
currently struggling in terms of sales, land values and
demand, with a bare 8 sales of dairy farms throughout New
Zealand for the month of November 2019, compared to 30 in
November 2018 and 36 in November 2017,” he concludes.
Points of Interest around New Zealand
include:
• Northland/Auckland
- hard work in the dairy arena; good activity in the
Auckland region and good prices for quality finishing
properties; good results on grazing blocks in Northland but
limited success on finishing
units
•
•
• Waikato/King
Country/Taupo - constrained dairy results in spite
of strong availability, with 2 sales only for the region,
one being a large dairy/kiwifruit property in the Te Awamutu
district; strong enquiry and a good level of sales at very
good prices in the finishing/dairy support/ beef category,
particularly in the Otorohanga and Te Kuiti
districts
•
•
• Bay
of Plenty/Rotorua - one significant dairy farm sale
destined for the horticultural sector plus a strong sale of
a drystock/kiwifruit mixed property; reasonably subdued in
the horticultural
sector
•
•
• Gisborne/Hawke’s
Bay - quiet in the Gisborne pastoral sector but
several solid sales of arable properties; good activity on
finishing blocks at healthy prices in Hawke’s Bay coupled
with reasonable results for arable and grazing properties;
results pending in the forestry
sector
•
•
• Wairarapa/Wellington
- very quiet in the Wairarapa – 2 sales only
within the finishing and grazing
categories
•
•
• Nelson/Marlborough
- surprisingly quiet throughout the north of the South
Island with light activity in the grazing sector only, and
one small forestry
sale
•
•
• Canterbury/West
Coast - zero sales in the dairy sector, as has been
the case for the last 3 months, reflecting a trend over the
last 2 years; constrained results in the grazing and
finishing sectors after a strong month in
October
•
•
• Otago - a
good level of sales at solid prices for finishing and
grazing units, particularly in the Dunedin and Cluther
districts; light on arable and horticulture and nil on
dairy
•
•
• Southland -
still hard work in the dairy sector but steady
results at good prices in the drystock category,
particularly so for finishing properties where some very
good outcomes were achieved.
•
•
Grazing
farms accounted for the largest number of sales with a 33%
share of all sales over the three months to November 2019,
Finishing farms accounted for 28%, Horticulture accounted
for 13%, and Arable properties accounted for 12% of all
sales. These four property types accounted for 86% of all
sales during the three months ended November
2019.
Dairy
Farms
For the
three months ended November 2019, the median sales price per
hectare for dairy farms was $39,678 (16 properties),
compared to $41,204 (11 properties) for the three months
ended October 2019, and $50,964 (36 properties) for the
three months ended November 2018. The median price per
hectare for dairy farms has decreased 22.1% over the past 12
months. The median dairy farm size for the three months
ended November 2019 was 104 hectares.
On a price per kilo of milk solids basis the median sales price was $51.18 per kg of milk solids for the three months ended November 2019, compared to $44.71 per kg of milk solids for the three months ended October 2019 (+14.5%), and $43.57 per kg of milk solids for the three months ended November 2018 (+17.5%).
The REINZ Dairy Farm Price Index fell 0.6% in the three months to November 2019 compared to the three months to October 2019. Compared to November 2018, the REINZ Dairy Farm Price Index rose 25.0%. The REINZ Dairy Farm Price Index adjusts for differences in farm size and location compared to the median price per hectare, which does not adjust for these factors.
Finishing
Farms
For the
three months ended November 2019, the median sale price per
hectare for finishing farms was $33,178 (72 properties),
compared to $34,553 (62 properties) for the three months
ended October 2019, and $32,635 (112 properties) for the
three months ended November 2018. The median price per
hectare for finishing farms has risen 1.7% over the past 12
months. The median finishing farm size for the three months
ended November 2019 was 39
hectares.
Grazing
Farms
For the
three months ended November 2019, the median sales price per
hectare for grazing farms was $10,410 (86 properties),
compared to $10,410 (86 properties) for the three months
ended October 2019 and $11,835 (93 properties) for the three
months ended November 2018. The median price per hectare for
grazing farms has fallen 12.0% over the past 12 months. The
median grazing farm size for the three months ended November
2019 was 106 hectares.
Horticulture
Farms
For the
three months ended November 2019, the median sales price per
hectare for horticulture farms was $213,890 (35 properties),
compared to $216,383 (44 properties) for the three months
ended October 2019 and $196,142 (50 properties) for the
three months ended November 2018. The median price per
hectare for horticulture farms has risen 9.0% over the past
12 months. The median horticulture farm size for the three
months ended November 2019 was 8
hectares.
ENDS