sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

REINZ says dairy farms sales and prices are falling but lifestyle block sales surge, particularly in Auckland

Rural News
REINZ says dairy farms sales and prices are falling but lifestyle block sales surge, particularly in Auckland

There was a significant drop in the number and price of dairy farms sold in the three months to September but the lifestyle block market is booming, according to the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand.

There were just 11 dairy farm sales in the three months to September, compared to 21 in the three months to August, 20 in the three months to September last year and 28 in the three months to September 2013.

Prices were also down, with the average price per hectare falling to $25,108 in the three months to September, down from $26,906 in the three months to August and down a massive 38% compared to September last year when the average sale price was $40,462 per hectare.

Conversely, the median size of dairy farms sold in the three months to September increased to 163 hectares, from 130 hectares in the three months to August and 93 hectares in the three months to September last year.

The REINZ Dairy Farm Price Index, which adjusts for differences in farm size and location, was down 8.2% compared to August and down 17.6% compared to September last year.

However dairy farmers had received some relief with the recent lift in Fonterra's Global Dairy Trade auction prices, REINZ rural spokesman Brian Peacocke said.

"While the problems are not yet solved, the signals indicate operational losses for the season may be less than anticipated," he said.

"The current levels of interest rates and exchange rates are additional positive factors."

Overall there were 337 farms of all types sold in the three months to September, compared to 387 in the three months to August and 347 in the three months to September last year.

The REINZ All Farm Price Index fell 7.6% compared to August and was down 6.5% compared to September last year.

"Spring sunshine, warmer temperatures, good prospects for beef and lamb, and the slow turnaround in the dairy industry are combining to lift morale in the rural sector," Peacocke said.

The star performer in the rural property market over the last few months has been lifestyle properties, with 2075 lifestyle blocks selling in the three months to September, down slightly on the 2120 sold in the three months to August, but up 40% compared to the 1477 sold in the three months to September last year.

The median sales price for lifestyle blocks was $535,000 compared with $545,000 in August and $505,000 in September last year.

There was particularly strong activity in the lifestyle market around Auckland, where the median sales price was $973,500 in the three months to September, up 14% from $855,000 in the same period last year.

The REINZ said there had been a solid increase in values for lifestyle properties on Auckland's northern fringe, where pockets of land were being rezoned residential and purchasers with long term perspectives were land banking.

Farm sales

Select chart tabs

New Zealand
Source: REINZ
Arable
Source: REINZ
Dairy
Source: REINZ
Finishing
Source: REINZ
Forestry
Source: REINZ
Grazing
Source: REINZ
Horticulture
Source: REINZ

 

 

 

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

3 Comments

Well, as Hugh P used ter say, lifestyle props are the urban land vent. So what you are reporting here is pure arbitrage at work.

Planners fubar the Urban market.

The TLA over the border leaves the gate open.

Why, them cash cows will wander.....

Up
0

Yet all of our farm products are going for massive premiums overseas, the money is not flowing back to famers where it needs to be.
This payment ploy of paying only the commodity price for our products is theft.
We are blinded by how good our farmers make our food products, and they are made to work like slaves to produce it.

Up
0

New regional council rules in our area are wiping millions of dollars off land values. It's only the start of it. The problem in NZ is not the environment, it's corrupt bureaucrats. What foreigner would be dumb enough to buy a farm here. The smart ones have already sold.

Up
0