Rented farmland in the Midwest is expected to transfer ownership at a higher rate than the national average of 9 percent, according to the USDA. States included in the Midwest Region, as defined in the USDA report, are Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Illinois and Iowa are the leading states for farmland rental incomes, combining in 2014 for $7.5 billion in rents collected on 24.1 million acres. Between 10-12 percent of farmland rented in Illinois and Iowa is expected to transfer ownership in the next five years.
In Indiana, 800,000 acres (10 percent) of the 7.9 million acres rented in 2014 are expected to transfer ownership in the next five years. Thirteen percent of Ohio’s rented farmland (800,000 of 6.2 million acres) is expected to transfer.
The percentage of transfer is higher in Michigan, where only 4 million acres of farmland were rented in 2014. Nearly a quarter of the Wolverine State’s rented farmland (900,000 acres) is slated for ownership transfer, according to USDA.
Kentucky and Tennessee are included in the Appalachian Region, which also includes West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina. Transfer rates were less for rented farmland in this region, where 7.7 percent of 15.5 million rented acres are expected to change ownership, including just 300,000 of Kentucky’s 4 million rented acres.
Some repositioning of land rental rates and values is ongoing. Forty percent of Midwest bankers in the Chicago Fed’s latest survey expect weakness in farmland values heading into 2016.
"Given lower prices for key crop and livestock products, many farm operators have returned to lenders in order to shore up reserves of working capital while attempting to ride out the downward cycle in agriculture," said David Oppedahl, senior business economist, in the Fed’s August report.
A copy of the USDA report on land ownership, rentals and transfers is available online at www.agcensus.usda.gov and the Fed report is available at www.chicagofed.org