| RICS rural land market
              survey for Great Britain 12/05/05
Farmland price rises came to an abrupt halt during the first quarter
              of 2005, according to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors' (RICS)
            rural land survey published  11 May.   Farmland sales are low as a result of continued uncertainty over
              the introduction of the new framework for CAP in the form of the
              Single Farm Payment.  Many sellers are waiting till the CAP
              deadline at the end of May.  Rising interest rates and some uncertainty over the housing market
              have taken the steam out of price rises. Farmland prices dropped
              by 2.9% between January and March 2005, although they are up 14%
              over the past year and 30% over the past two.   'Lifestyle buyers' purchasing farmland for residential
              or amenity purposes still feature strongly in the rural market,
              but the share of sales to this group fell to a two year low of
              40%, compared to an average of 44% in 2004, and a survey high of
              51% in 2003 Q4.  Demand for residential farms continues to
              rise compared to a year ago, though at a slower pace.  Overall
              demand conditions remain strong, assisted by a recovery in commercial
              buyer interest over the past year.   On an annual basis, farmland prices across all regions have increased,
              with the strongest price growth and market conditions seen in Wales,
              Yorkshire and Humberside, the South West and West Midlands.  According to RICS rural spokesperson, Sue Steer :  'The introduction of the Single Farm Payment Scheme on May
              16 has kept more land off the market than is usual for this time
              of year. Nevertheless, farmer buyers are not in short supply and
              although the housing market has cooled, we are still seeing enough
              interest from amenity and residential buyers.'  |