- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Arkansas
Prior to the meltdown of housing, poultry growers were increasingly losing their rears. Natural gas prices were high, propane even higher and it is a major expense. Many integrators (chicken companies) own a propane business, and deduct the gas price from the batch settlement check. There were farmers who got red checks, they spent more on fuel than they made on the birds.
This cascaded into an avalanche of foreclosures - especially in the oldest barns (mostly built after a major ice storm that collapsed hundreds of barns circa 1989.) These were mostly 40' x 400' (steel truss frame) and built from 1989-1996. After 1996, few barns were built for a couple of years, then the new style was 43' x 500', steel truss frame, which quickly morphed into a wood frame construction with drop ceiling that was supposed to be more energy efficient.
By 2008, that changed to the 55' x 600' or the 66' x 600' wood truss barns...and the cost was about $12 a SF, so you easily got $400,000 in the larger barns and most farms had a minimum of 4 barns. But about the same time, beef prices begin to rise. Now beef is horribly expensive and the glut of chicken that was in frozen storage and selling overseas for as little at 5¢ a pound net, evaporated. In the past couple of years grain prices have fell along with energy costs thus, the profit margins are high. Now the integrators are talking more rubes into building the large barns as a fast clip to meet demand...which eventually will lead to another bust, of course. And much of the margin of profit can be attributed to lower natural gas prices.
Today I got a call about a farm that I appraised last summer. It had 4 older barns (40x400) and 2 newer 43'x500' barns. The bank appraisal-ordering dept. seemed to be oblivious to the fact that the farmer had walked and another farmer was watching the place. He, in turn wanted the farm and was willing to upgrade the place. After some going back and forth, I valued the barns as a dark farm with the knowledge that these barns were quickly being bought up and upgraded, often with additional new barns. My comps suggested same to a point, but some older sales still reflected them as pariahs on the market. The transition from one to the other was quick.
I valued the farm with the assumption that it would sell quickly and be restored to service with the possible addition of more barns. The banker confessed they had people bidding for many of these kinds of farms. But they wanted me to look at the appraisal and perhaps lower the value???? using the assumption that it would be foreclosed and sold as totally distressed.???? It appears to have been an 8 month process to go through foreclosure.
Seems the ordering guy (an appraiser) had been asked to talk to me about it by a senior reviewer. What the heck is that all about? I told him, I saw nothing that would change my opinion and I certainly was unwilling to change the value of that farm, but would consider re-valuing it, but could not think of any reason why I would not lean towards the idea it would sell pretty well and quickly. I just saw one nearby sale of land for at least $2,000 premium per acre over prices only one year ago, and later went by and they were building pads for new poultry houses. Demand for these houses are out of proportion to common sense which tells me a high percentage of these will fail over the next 5 to 8 years when the market will once again turn as beef and pork numbers ramp up and grain and energy prices increase.
Perhaps this is the result of FSA or SBA stepping in and wanting it looked at again, but normally they require one look at the cost of bringing these dark farms up to snuff and selling them as opposed to treating them as unusable which is what I did. I think the farm will be revived. I don't know what the bank wanted. I don't understand why the bank would want a lower value for their books or why they thought I would change it. The guy I spoke to understood my position, but I really wonder why they bothered to even call me.
This cascaded into an avalanche of foreclosures - especially in the oldest barns (mostly built after a major ice storm that collapsed hundreds of barns circa 1989.) These were mostly 40' x 400' (steel truss frame) and built from 1989-1996. After 1996, few barns were built for a couple of years, then the new style was 43' x 500', steel truss frame, which quickly morphed into a wood frame construction with drop ceiling that was supposed to be more energy efficient.
By 2008, that changed to the 55' x 600' or the 66' x 600' wood truss barns...and the cost was about $12 a SF, so you easily got $400,000 in the larger barns and most farms had a minimum of 4 barns. But about the same time, beef prices begin to rise. Now beef is horribly expensive and the glut of chicken that was in frozen storage and selling overseas for as little at 5¢ a pound net, evaporated. In the past couple of years grain prices have fell along with energy costs thus, the profit margins are high. Now the integrators are talking more rubes into building the large barns as a fast clip to meet demand...which eventually will lead to another bust, of course. And much of the margin of profit can be attributed to lower natural gas prices.
Today I got a call about a farm that I appraised last summer. It had 4 older barns (40x400) and 2 newer 43'x500' barns. The bank appraisal-ordering dept. seemed to be oblivious to the fact that the farmer had walked and another farmer was watching the place. He, in turn wanted the farm and was willing to upgrade the place. After some going back and forth, I valued the barns as a dark farm with the knowledge that these barns were quickly being bought up and upgraded, often with additional new barns. My comps suggested same to a point, but some older sales still reflected them as pariahs on the market. The transition from one to the other was quick.
I valued the farm with the assumption that it would sell quickly and be restored to service with the possible addition of more barns. The banker confessed they had people bidding for many of these kinds of farms. But they wanted me to look at the appraisal and perhaps lower the value???? using the assumption that it would be foreclosed and sold as totally distressed.???? It appears to have been an 8 month process to go through foreclosure.
Seems the ordering guy (an appraiser) had been asked to talk to me about it by a senior reviewer. What the heck is that all about? I told him, I saw nothing that would change my opinion and I certainly was unwilling to change the value of that farm, but would consider re-valuing it, but could not think of any reason why I would not lean towards the idea it would sell pretty well and quickly. I just saw one nearby sale of land for at least $2,000 premium per acre over prices only one year ago, and later went by and they were building pads for new poultry houses. Demand for these houses are out of proportion to common sense which tells me a high percentage of these will fail over the next 5 to 8 years when the market will once again turn as beef and pork numbers ramp up and grain and energy prices increase.
Perhaps this is the result of FSA or SBA stepping in and wanting it looked at again, but normally they require one look at the cost of bringing these dark farms up to snuff and selling them as opposed to treating them as unusable which is what I did. I think the farm will be revived. I don't know what the bank wanted. I don't understand why the bank would want a lower value for their books or why they thought I would change it. The guy I spoke to understood my position, but I really wonder why they bothered to even call me.