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Archive news can be found at the bottom of the page RICS Rural land market survey for Great Britain ? first half, 2007
Rural land prices continued to climb during the first half of the year, reaching the highest levels in the survey?s history, reports the RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors)rural land market survey published today (28 September). The farmland market strengthened, with prices rising by 22.6 percent compared to 18.1 percent in the second half of 2006. Demand is booming in both the farming and non-agricultural sectors. Individual farmers, with greater confidence in the profitability of the industry, are more reluctant to sell and increasingly entering the market as purchasers. Londoners, armed with record city bonuses have continued to drive demand for residential farmland.
Chartered Surveyors report that rising demand and increased competition for farmland is also coming from abroad. Britain?s farmland is being bought by Danish and Irish farmers ? who are looking to invest here where the prices are still amongst the cheapest in Europe. This combination of different purchaser types is pushing land prices to their unprecedented levels.
The weighted average price of farmland rose to ?8,850 per hectare, up from ?8,164 in H2 2006. The number of farmland sales in the first half of the year fell by 29 percent, to be in line with levels from H1 2004. The breakdown of farm purchases by type shows record sales to institutional investors, who doubled their share of purchases from 2 to 4 percent, and to individual farmers, as sales to them increased by 50 percent.
Confidence in the outlook for commercial and residential farmland property prices remains very high.
RICS spokesperson Sue Steer says:
?Rising commodity prices and increased interest in biofuels have resulted in a bit of a feeding frenzy for farmland as farmers compete with investors, foreign farmers and lifestyle buyers for properties. Although the availability of land increased fractionally in the last half year, supply remains constrained and insufficient to satisfy the appetites of buyers.
?The market is being fuelled by city buyers trying to make the most of low farmland prices, and large bonuses are entrenching these ?move to the country? trends. Farmers from Denmark and Ireland are also becoming more visible as they buy up competitively priced land in the UK. ? 28th Sep 2007by: Editor
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