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The Agricultural Newsletter
from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Number 1993

FARMLAND VALUES AND CREDIT CONDITIONS
Summary
Farmland values for the Seventh Federal Reserve District
climbed 14 percent on a year-over-year basis in the second
quarter of 2021—their largest such gain in eight years. Values
for “good” agricultural land moved up 3 percent in the
second quarter of 2021 from the first quarter, according
to a survey of 152 District bankers. With 70 percent of the
survey respondents forecasting higher District farmland
values during the July through September period of 2021
and 30 percent forecasting stable values, such values were
expected to rise again during the third quarter of this year.
Agricultural credit conditions for the District were
better in the second quarter of 2021 than a year earlier, in
spite of the pandemic’s impact on rural regions. Seventytwo percent of the responding bankers indicated that their
respective lending areas had been at least modestly affected
by the pandemic during the past year; yet, on average, just
34 percent of their agricultural borrowers were negatively
affected by the pandemic over the same time frame. In the
second quarter of 2021, repayment rates for non-real-estate
farm loans dramatically improved from the same quarter
of the previous year. The portion of the District’s agricultural
loan portfolio reported as having “major” or “severe”
repayment problems (2.8 percent) had not been lower in the

August 2021

SAVE THE DATE
On November 30, 2021, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
will hold a virtual event exploring the impact of biofuels on
Midwest farming and related trends that could influence the
future of agriculture. Registration is available online,
https://www.chicagofed.org/events/2021/ag-conference.

second quarter of a year since 2014. Notably, this share was
markedly lower than the 8.3 percent registered for the second
quarter of 2020. Furthermore, renewals and extensions of
non-real-estate farm loans in the District decreased from
a year ago. For the April through June period of 2021, the
demand for non-real-estate farm loans was much smaller
than a year earlier, but the funds available for lending by
agricultural banks were much greater. Hence, for the second
quarter of 2021, the District’s average loan-to-deposit ratio
was down to 67.5 percent. Average nominal interest rates
on operating, feeder cattle, and farm real estate loans ended
the second quarter of 2021 at their lowest points in the
history of the survey.

Farmland values
At 14 percent, the year-over-year increase in the value of
District farmland for the second quarter of 2021 was the
largest recorded since 2013’s third quarter. All five District
states exhibited double-digit year-over-year gains in their

Percent change in dollar value of “good” farmland
Top:
April 1, 2021 to July 1, 2021
Bottom: July 1, 2020 to July 1, 2021
April 1, 2021
to
July 1, 2021

July 1, 2020
to
July 1, 2021

+3
+2
+6
*
0
+3

+12
+12
+18
*
+13
+14

Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Michigan
Wisconsin
Seventh District
*Insufficient response.

V
0
+13
I
+3
+18

II
+13
+13

MI

*

+5 IV
+22
III
+3
+17

VI
0
+14

VIII

*

VII
+4
+11

IN
+2
+12

1. Index of demand for Seventh District non-real-estate farm loans
index
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
1985 ’88

’91

’94

’97 2000 ’03

’06

’09

’12

’15

’18

’21

Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago surveys of farmland values.

agricultural land values (see map and table on front, but
note that too few Michigan bankers responded to report a
numerical change in farmland values). “Good” agricultural
land in the District increased 3 percent in the second quarter
of 2021 relative to the first quarter. This was the third quarterly
gain in a row for District agricultural land values; there
had not been such a streak since the first quarter of 2013.
After the recession induced by the Covid-19 pandemic
ended in April 2020, agricultural prices began to bounce
back over the summer of 2020. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s (USDA) June index of prices received by
farmers was up 22 percent from a year earlier (see final table).
Of particular relevance to the District were the June corn,
soybean, and hog prices, which were up 90 percent, 74 percent, and 100 percent from a year ago, respectively. Accelerating exports of agricultural products helped push prices
higher, after trade had slowed because of the pandemic
and various disputes.
Nearly three-fourths of the survey respondents
(72 percent) indicated that the Covid-19 pandemic had
some negative impacts in the rural areas served by their
respective banks over the past year. Yet, according to these
bankers’ survey responses, on average, only around onethird of their farm customers were negatively affected by the
pandemic over the same time frame (6 percent were significantly adversely affected, and 28 percent were modestly
so). These results were much better than those of similar
survey questions asked a year ago. The remarkable recovery
for farm borrowers was assisted by rising product prices
and federal government funds allocated for agriculture.
By the end of July 2021, the Coronavirus Food Assistance
Program (CFAP) had dispersed over $5.7 billion to farm
operations in the five states of the District (23 percent of
the $24.4 billion sent nationwide). Additional resources
flowed to agriculture through the Paycheck Protection
Program (PPP), and many farms qualified for forgiveness
of PPP loans. An Illinois banker stated that “government
payments have buoyed the agricultural sector.”

Corn and soybean prices have been supported by
tight stocks, higher levels of exports during the pandemic,
and concerns about the impact of drought on yields in the
western Corn Belt. Using trend yields, the USDA estimated
in July that 2021’s harvest of corn for grain would be
15.2 billion bushels (a potential record) and that this year’s
harvest of soybeans would be 4.4 billion bushels (the third
largest of all time). The USDA forecasted prices for the
2021–22 crop year of $5.60 per bushel for corn and $13.70 per
bushel for soybeans. When calculated with these prices,
the projected revenues from the 2021 U.S. harvests relative
to revenues from the previous year’s would be 29 percent
larger for corn and 50 percent larger for soybeans. Thus,
expected corn and soybean revenues in 2021 should surpass
their levels in 2020 (when they surprised observers because
crop prices moved up even with large harvests by historical
standards). Agricultural land values have been spurred
higher by a surge in farm revenues and an influx of government payments. Moreover, historically low interest rates
have had a positive effect on such values.

Credit conditions
The recent improvement in agricultural credit conditions
continued into the second quarter of 2021. Nominal interest
rates on agricultural loans dipped to new lows for the
survey: The District’s average nominal interest rates on
new feeder cattle, operating, and farm real estate loans
moved down to 4.55 percent, 4.40 percent, and 4.02 percent,
respectively, as of July 1, 2021. After being adjusted for
inflation with the Personal Consumption Expenditures
Price Index, average agricultural interest rates were below
the levels seen last in the third quarter of 1975. Even with
lower interest rates in the second quarter of 2021, demand
for non-real-estate farm loans was constrained. With 9 percent
of survey respondents noting demand for non-real-estate
farm loans above the level of a year ago and 46 percent
noting demand below that of a year ago, the index of loan
2. Percentage of Seventh District farm loan portfolio with
“major” or “severe” repayment problems
percent
20

15

10

5

0
1985 ’88

’91

’94

’97 ’2000 ’03

’06

’09

’12

’15

’18

’21

Source: Author’s calculations based on data from Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago surveys of farmland values (for the second quarter of each year).

Credit conditions at Seventh District agricultural banks

Interest rates on farm loans

Loan
demand

Funds
availability

Loan
repayment rates

Average loan-todeposit ratio

Operating
loansa

Feeder
cattlea

Real
estatea

(index)b

(index)b

(index)b

(percent)

(percent)

(percent)

(percent)

2020
Jan–Mar
Apr–June
July–Sept
Oct–Dec

117
103
85
91

107
119
131
148

59
64
93
133

78.9
77.6
75.0
73.6

4.83
4.77
4.65
4.49

5.01
4.94
4.79
4.66

4.51
4.40
4.24
4.10

2021
Jan–Mar
Apr–June

79
63

162
160

146
146

69.7
67.5

4.42
4.40

4.58
4.55

4.08
4.02

At end of period.
Bankers responded to each item by indicating whether conditions in the current quarter were higher or lower than (or the same as) in the year-earlier quarter. The
index numbers are computed by subtracting the percentage of bankers who responded “lower” from the percentage who responded “higher” and adding 100.
Note: Historical data on Seventh District agricultural credit conditions are available online, https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/agletter/index.

a
b

demand was 63 for the second quarter of 2021; this was
the lowest reading since the fourth quarter of 1986 (as seen
in chart 1). In line with these results, over the first half of
2021, District banks made fewer farm operating and real
estate loans than normal, according to responding bankers.
In contrast, over the first six months of 2021, the Farm
Credit System, as well as merchants, dealers, and other
input suppliers, reportedly lent more funds to the agricultural sector than the normal volume (and such lending
by life insurance companies was at about the typical
level). With 61 percent of survey respondents reporting
their banks had more funds available to lend in the second
quarter of 2021 than a year ago and just 1 percent reporting
they had less, the index of funds availability was 160 for
the second quarter of 2021 (slightly below the prior quarter’s reading). With demand for non-real-estate farm loans
down sharply from a year ago and funds available to lend
up robustly, the District’s average loan-to-deposit ratio for
the second quarter of 2021 fell to 67.5 percent, its lowest
level in seven years (and 13 percentage points below the
average level desired by the responding bankers). On net,
the amount of collateral required by banks across the
District was about the same as a year ago.
Higher crop prices and government disbursements
combined again to help boost repayment rates for non-realestate farm loans: The index of loan repayment rates was
146 for the second quarter of 2021 (48 percent of responding
bankers noted higher rates of loan repayment than a year
ago and only 2 percent noted lower rates). At 2.8 percent
of the District loan portfolio, the share of farm loans with
“major” or “severe” repayment problems (as measured in
the second quarter of every year) was last lower in 2014—
this result was a big turnaround from a year ago (see chart 2).
Additionally, renewals and extensions of non-real-estate
farm loans during the April through June period of 2021
were lower than during the same period of a year ago, as
merely 3 percent of survey respondents reported more of
them and 34 percent reported fewer of them.

Looking forward
Given strong agricultural credit conditions, most survey
respondents anticipated District farmland values will keep
rising: 70 percent of responding bankers projected farmland
values to increase in the third quarter of 2021, and 30 percent
projected them to be stable (none projected them to decrease).
Survey respondents anticipated volumes of most types of
non-real-estate farm loans to decline in the third quarter
of 2021 compared with year-earlier levels. In contrast, they
anticipated the volume of farm real estate loans to increase.
While District agricultural bankers seemed optimistic about
the farm sector over the short term, some cautioned about
its longer-term prospects, given the uncertainties surrounding
the course of the pandemic and government responses,
as well as trade flows and input costs. As one Illinois banker
noted: “High commodity prices, solid yields, and PPP
loans have sharply improved farmers’ finances. However,
long-term risks are of serious concern.”
David B. Oppedahl, senior business economist

AgLetter (ISSN 1080-8639) is published quarterly by the
Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Chicago. The information used in the preparation of this
publication is obtained from sources considered reliable, but its
use does not constitute an endorsement of its accuracy or
intent by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago or the Federal
Reserve System. Opinions expressed in this article are those
of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago or the Federal Reserve System.
© 2021 Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
AgLetter articles may be reproduced in whole or in part,
provided the articles are not reproduced or distributed for
commercial gain and provided the source is appropriately
credited. Prior written permission must be obtained for any
other reproduction, distribution, republication, or creation of
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please contact Helen Koshy, senior editor, at 312-322-5830 or
email Helen.Koshy@chi.frb.org. AgLetter and other Bank
publications are available at https://www.chicagofed.org.

SELECTED AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC INDICATORS

Percent change from
Prior
Year
Two years
period
ago
ago

Latest
period

Value

Prices received by farmers (index, 2011=100)
Crops (index, 2011=100)
		Corn ($ per bu.)
		Hay ($ per ton)
		Soybeans ($ per bu.)
		Wheat ($ per bu.)
Livestock and products (index, 2011=100)
		Barrows & gilts ($ per cwt.)
		Steers & heifers ($ per cwt.)
		Milk ($ per cwt.)
		Eggs ($ per doz.)

June
June
June
June
June
June
June
June
June
June
June

107
107
6.00
179
14.50
6.24
108
82.70
123.00
18.40
0.79

0.9
1.4
1.5
1.7
–2.0
–3.4
0.7
4.3
1.7
–4.2
–3.5

22
20
90
10
74
37
24
100
12
1
10

15
19
51
2
74
30
11
39
7
2
11

Consumer prices (index, 1982–84=100)
Food

June
June

271
276

0.9
0.8

5
2

6
7

Production or stocks
Corn stocks (mil. bu.)
Soybean stocks (mil. bu.)
Wheat stocks (mil. bu.)
Beef production (bil. lb.)
Pork production (bil. lb.)
Milk production (bil. lb.)

June 1
June 1
June 1
June
June
June

4,112
767
844
2.40
2.25
19.0

N.A.
N.A.
N.A.
8.5
8.9
–4.5

–18
–44
–18
1
–6
3

–21
–57
–22
8
6
4

Agricultural exports ($ mil.)
Corn (mil. bu.)
Soybeans (mil. bu.)
Wheat (mil. bu.)

June
June
June
June

12,991
261
34
74

–11.4
–21.7
–27.0
–16.3

27
32
–49
–12

16
116
–71
–7

Farm machinery (units)
Tractors, 40 HP or more
		40 to 100 HP
		100 HP or more
Combines

June
June
June
June

9,467
7,382
2,085
502

6
6
4
39

3
–3
33
4

25
23
32
41

N.A. Not applicable.
Sources: Author’s calculations based on data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Association of Equipment Manufacturers.