RSS

Is There a Capital Squeeze Coming to Agriculture?

Is There a Capital Squeeze Coming to Agriculture?

For most of the last decade, farmland conversations have focused on prices. Yields. Commodity cycles. Input costs. Land values moving steadily upward.

But lately, a different question has been gaining traction in agriculture: What happens if credit, not prices, becomes the constraint?

That question was at the heart of a recent discussion featuring Robert Andjelic, Canada’s largest farmland owner, who has been meeting directly with major lenders and financial institutions across the country. If you missed that conversation, you can watch it HERE.

The message wasn’t alarmist. It was observational.

And worth paying attention to.

The pressure isn’t coming from farms

One of the most important points to understand is this: Canadian banks aren’t tightening because agriculture is failing.

They’re tightening because risk is building elsewhere. A major theme raised was pressure coming from commercial real estate, where some lenders have been managing struggling loans by extending terms and adjusting payments, sometimes called “extend and pretend.” Whether or not you love that phrase, the concept is simple: When risk piles up in one sector, lenders often become more conservative elsewhere.

When banks adjust, they don’t always do it loudly.
They do it through:

  • bigger down payments (lower loan-to-value)

  • more conservative appraisals

  • longer financing conditions

  • more scrutiny of margins and cash flow

These changes often show up before stress appears in farm balance sheets.

Agriculture is resilient, but not immune

There’s no question agriculture is structurally different from many asset classes.

People need to eat. Productive land is finite. Farmland income resets annually. People don’t postpone food the way they postpone a vehicle purchase. And farm supply/demand adjusts annually as yields swing in different regions.

Those fundamentals help agriculture hold up during downturns. But resilience doesn’t eliminate risk, it just changes where the risk lives.

When capital becomes more selective, the market doesn’t stop functioning, it becomes more discerning about who can transact and how

In plain language: the buyer pool doesn’t disappear, but buying power changes. That can slow the market, shift negotiating dynamics, and create bigger differences between well-capitalized buyers and financing-dependent buyers.

What this means for sellers

For landowners considering a sale, this doesn’t mean demand disappears. It means the buyer pool may become more segmented. Well-capitalized farmers, family operations with manageable debt, and investors using patient capital remain active.

Serious demand still exists, but financing-dependent buyers may be more sensitive to timing, structure and possession dates.

In this environment, preparation matters. So does strategy. 

  • have lease and possession details clear

  • expect more financing conditions and lender involvement

  • consider whether broad exposure or targeted marketing best fits your goals

What this means for buyers

For buyers, especially farmers, the real risk right now isn’t land itself. It’s over-extension.

This is a good moment for clear-eyed math:

  • run your numbers on today’s interest rates

  • protect working capital

  • consider appraisal risk and financing timelines

  • prioritize purchases that strengthen the operation, not just expand it

If you’re investing in farmland

Farmland remains a compelling long-term asset. But like all real assets, outcomes depend on:

  • Entry price

  • Cost of capital

  • Time horizon

In periods like this, liquidity and discipline often create opportunity, not through distress, but through differentiation.

This isn’t panic. It’s positioning.

History shows that markets rarely change direction overnight. They shift gradually, through behaviour, not headlines.

Credit conditions tightening doesn’t mean agriculture is broken. It means assumptions deserve another look.

Clear eyes.
Good math.
Thoughtful decisions.

That’s how strong operators, and long-term landowners, navigate cycles like this.

The window for good decisions doesn’t close overnight, but it does narrow. In periods when capital becomes more selective, the advantage usually goes to those who ask questions early, not those who wait for certainty.

Understanding where you stand financially, structurally, and strategically, puts you in a stronger position no matter how the market unfolds.

If you’re considering a land purchase, sale, or transition, Murdoch Farm Team can help you evaluate your options with clear eyes and grounded market insight. No pressure, just perspective. We’re always available for a no-obligation conversation about your land, your timing and your goals.

The Saskatchewan REALTORS® Association (SRA) IDX Reciprocity listings are displayed in accordance with SRA's MLS® Data Access Agreement and are copyright of the Saskatchewan REALTORS® Association (SRA).
The above information is from sources deemed reliable but should not be relied upon without independent verification. The information presented here is for general interest only, no guarantees apply.
Trademarks are owned and controlled by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA). Used under license.
MLS® System data of the Saskatchewan REALTORS® Association (SRA) displayed on this site is refreshed every 2 hours.