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Home / The Country

Kiwifruit orchards jump $100,000 per hectare in Bay of Plenty

Carmen Hall
By Carmen Hall
Bay of Plenty Times·
25 Oct, 2019 04:00 PM4 mins to read

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Bayleys rural real estate specialist Snow Williams says the kiwifruit orchard market is buoyant. Photo / Andrew Warner

Bayleys rural real estate specialist Snow Williams says the kiwifruit orchard market is buoyant. Photo / Andrew Warner

Gold kiwifruit orchards are worth $100,000 more per hectare than last year with some earning 13 per cent returns.

''Spectacular'' is how PGG Wrightson rural and lifestyle sales consultant Stan Robb described the current marketplace, which has ''gone up another step''.

Read more: Bust to boom: Gold kiwifruit orchard prices soar

Robb said top gold kiwifruit orchards were fetching $1.2 to $1.3 million per hectare and last month he sold an orchard in Te Teko for more than $45m.

That orchard included 36ha of gold and 8ha of green kiwifruit, and strong orchard gate returns were continuing to drive up prices, Robb said.

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''If you have a good gold orchard you can expect an orchard gate return of about $200,000 a hectare. Once you take out your growing costs you are still getting a 12 to 13 per cent return on your money, which is hard to beat.''

Read more: The kiwifruit industry's amazing comeback

But Robb said it was a Catch-22 and, with everything looking good for the foreseeable future, there was a shortage of listings as demand outstripped supply.

PGG Wrightson rural and lifestyle sales consultant Stan Robb says gold kiwifruit orchards are fetching $1.2 to $1.3 million per hectare. Photo / File
PGG Wrightson rural and lifestyle sales consultant Stan Robb says gold kiwifruit orchards are fetching $1.2 to $1.3 million per hectare. Photo / File

''There is very little on the market and, because everything is looking great, people are holding on to their orchards.''

About 90 per cent of buyers were existing kiwifruit growers looking to expand, Robb said.

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Bayleys rural real estate specialist Snow Williams said the market was buoyant and good gold growers were yielding more than 15,000 trays per hectare.

He agreed listings were tight and there was a big pool of buyers looking for quality orchards.

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Others were exploring greenfields options - buying a bare farm where they could set up a brand-new ''Rolls Royce orchard'' with the best of everything.

Read more: Future bright after Psa but kiwifruit grower warns against complacency

''So basically you plant an orchard in rootstock and graft over to gold, but you still have to buy the licence. So this is the competition green kiwifruit orchards are facing as gold is more lucrative.''

Last year, Williams sold Matai Pacific's vast 98ha kiwifruit portfolio in Te Puke for an undisclosed price.

New Zealand Kiwifruit Growers Inc chief executive Nikki Johnson says the high orchard prices reflect the strong growth and returns in the industry. Photo / File
New Zealand Kiwifruit Growers Inc chief executive Nikki Johnson says the high orchard prices reflect the strong growth and returns in the industry. Photo / File

New Zealand Kiwifruit Growers Inc chief executive Nikki Johnson said the high orchard prices reflected the strong growth and returns the industry was projecting during the next 10 years.

But production costs had increased strongly year on year and Johnson said this would impact grower returns.

''Growers need to be aware of growth challenges including labour, water and land as well as potential impacts from biosecurity.''

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The organisation was focusing on attracting labour and ran its first labour attraction campaign after a 1200-person worker shortage in the Bay of Plenty in 2018.

That strategy, along with the Government's labour shortage declaration, good weather and longer shifts, meant at the peak of this season's harvest the worker shortage dropped to 900, Johnson said.

''We will soon launch our second year of the labour attraction campaign to encourage New Zealanders and backpackers to join the industry across New Zealand's kiwifruit regions.''

Zespri Chief Grower and Alliances officer Dave Courtney says the future looks bright. Photo / File
Zespri Chief Grower and Alliances officer Dave Courtney says the future looks bright. Photo / File

Zespri chief grower and alliances officer Dave Courtney said the company's total operating revenue exceeded $3 billion for the first time this year.

He said Zespri did not set the price for its gold kiwifruit licences, the growers did through a closed tender process.

Read more: Want a job? Kiwifruit industry launches campaign to attract thousands of workers

Zespri figures showed prices had jumped from a median price of $265,108 in 2018 to $290,000 in 2019 and another 700ha of unrestricted licence and 50ha of gold organic licence will be released next year.

In 2019 there were 546 bidders and only 243 were successful.

''It remains our intent to continue with the release of 750ha annually until 2022, with the decision confirming the release for the following year to be made after each selling season.''

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