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Home / The Country

Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey: Farmer sentiment at highest level since mid-2017

The Country
9 Dec, 2024 10:21 PM5 mins to read

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Rabobank's latest Rural Confidence Survey found sheep and beef farmers particularly positive. Photo / Tracey Robinson

Rabobank's latest Rural Confidence Survey found sheep and beef farmers particularly positive. Photo / Tracey Robinson

Improved pricing for New Zealand’s dairy and red meat products has driven a strong lift in farmer sentiment, the fourth and final Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey of the year has found.

Following a sizeable lift in the September quarter, farmer confidence in the broader agri economy has risen again and the net confidence reading now sits at +34% (from +3%) – its highest level since mid-2017.

The Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey, conducted since 2003, is administered by independent research agency Kantar, interviewing a panel of about 450 farmers each quarter.

The latest survey, completed last month, found 47% of farmers (30% previously) were now expecting the performance of the broader agri economy to improve in the year ahead, while the number expecting conditions to worsen had halved to 13% (from 27%).

The remaining 38% of farmers expected conditions to stay the same (41% previously).

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Rabobank country banking general manager Bruce Weir said it was fantastic to see confidence flowing back into the sector after a difficult 18 months for industry participants.

“Having battled through a really tough period, farmers are now seeing some light at the end of the tunnel and their mood has noticeably lifted from earlier in the year,” he said.

“This is great to see as we move into the holiday season and bodes well for a strong year for the sector in 2025.”

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The survey found pastoral farmers were the chief contributors to the overall lift in confidence, with their improved sentiment attributable largely to improved commodity pricing.

Weir said among farmers with an optimistic outlook, 59% cited improved commodity pricing as a key reason for holding this view and this reflected the positive pricing movements in the past few months.

“Since September, we’ve seen Fonterra make several upward movements to the mid-point of their farmgate milk price forecast,” he said.

“We’ve also seen beef prices continue to strengthen and lamb prices start to pick up after a very challenging period.”

The latest survey period concluded on November 27. Weir said there had been more good news for primary producers since, including Fonterra’s record-breaking milk price forecast of $10/kg milksolids and the Reserve Bank dropping the Official Cash Rate a further 50 basis points.

“This is all really positive news for the sector and, if the survey was taken today, there’s a really strong case to say that farmer confidence would be even higher than it was just a couple of weeks ago.”

Among the 13% of farmers with a pessimistic outlook on the broader agri economy, the survey found rising input costs (41%), government intervention/policies (35%) and overseas markets (30%) were the major factors cited for holding this view.

Own-farm business performance

Rabobank country banking general manager Bruce Weir says it's great to see confidence flowing back into the sector.  Photo / Rabobank
Rabobank country banking general manager Bruce Weir says it's great to see confidence flowing back into the sector. Photo / Rabobank

The survey found farmers’ expectations for their farm business operations had also improved, with the net reading on this measure lifting to +37% from +19% previously.

As with headline confidence, this is the strongest reading on this measure since mid-2017.

Not surprisingly, dairy farmers continue to be the most optimistic of all the sector groupings, with almost seven in 10 now expecting an improved performance from their operation across the next 12 months.

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Listen to Jamie Mackay interview Bruce Weir on The Country below:

Sheep and beef farmers were also markedly more upbeat about the prospects for their businesses, with three in 10 expecting improved performance and only one in 10 now expecting performance to worsen.

Weir said horticulturalists bucked the upward trend, recording a lower reading on this measure.

“Growers are still broadly positive about the year ahead for their own operations – with more expecting their own farm business performance to improve than those expecting it to worsen – but they are less optimistic than in September and are now the most pessimistic of all the sector groupings.”

Weir said horticulturists hadn’t seen the same recent price revival as their counterparts in the pastoral sectors and lingering concerns over farm input prices and the outlook for overseas markets appeared to be holding sentiment back.

Viability and investment intentions

The survey found farmers’ investment intentions increased, with the net reading on this measure lifting to +18% from +2% previously.

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Dairy farmers recorded the strongest investment intentions, increasing to a net reading of +39% (from +21% previously), while investment intentions among sheep and beef farmers also rose (net reading of +2% from -17% last quarter).

Horticulturists’ investment intentions were marginally weaker, falling to a net reading of -5% (-3% previously).

“This survey also saw some positive movements with regard to farm viability with more farmers now assessing their own operations as easily viable (up to 22% from 17% previously) and a halving of those who assessed their own operation as unviable (4% from 8% last quarter),” Weir said.

“This is the smallest percentage we’ve seen in the unviable bucket since late 2022, and we’re hopeful this will drop even further in 2025.”

Rural land values

Weir said improved farmer sentiment was also helping to revive previously subdued farmer expectations for rural land values.

Rabobank had been collecting data on expectations for rural land values every second quarter since late 2022, he said.

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“This the first time we’ve had more farmers expecting rural land values to increase over the next 12 months than those tipping land values to fall.”

This quarter, 30% of farmers expected to see farm prices lift, with only 12% expecting a fall, he said.

“This aligns with the feedback we’re getting from our agri managers around the traps who are now starting to see some farm sales at improved prices, particularly for dairy farms.”


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