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Farm Business Analysis—Ch.18 What are the strengths and weaknesses of the farm business? How can we measure how well the farm is doing?

Farm Business Analysis—Ch.18

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Farm Business Analysis—Ch.18. What are the strengths and weaknesses of the farm business? How can we measure how well the farm is doing?. Farm A Net worth $400,000 Operator Labor12 mo. Net income $50,000. Farm B Net worth $800,000 Operator Labor24 mo. Net income $80,000. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Farm Business Analysis—Ch.18

What are the strengths and weaknesses of the farm business?

How can we measure how well the farm is doing?

Page 2: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Which farm would you prefer?

Farm A Net worth $400,000 Operator Labor 12

mo. Net income $50,000

Farm B Net worth $800,000 Operator Labor 24

mo. Net income $80,000

Page 3: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

What Affects Net Farm Income and Cash Flow?

SizeEfficiency

Page 4: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Size or Scale of the Farm

Resources

Acres

Cows or sows

No.of layers

Total assets--$

Number of workers

Production

Pigs sold

Cattle fed out

Bushels sold

Lbs. of milk

Gross sales--$

Page 5: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Efficiency = production per unit of resources

Physical efficiencybushels per acrelbs. milk per cowpigs per sow per yearlambs per ewepounds of feed per lb. of gain

Page 6: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Economic Efficiency(value of product

per unit of resource)Crop value per acre--$Asset turnover ratio--%

= gross income / total assetsLivestock returns per $ of feed Gross income per person (FTE)

Page 7: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Economic efficiency also depends on:

Value of Product (marketing)

Sale priceQuality TimePlace

Cost of ResourcesSeed, chemicalsCash rentMachinery, fuelWagesFeed

Page 8: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Economic Efficiency= Units of output x selling price

Units of resource x purch. price

Ex.: livestock production per $ feed

1 lb. gain x $.50/lb. price = $.50

3.0 lb. feed x $.08/lb. cost = $.24

= $2.08 per $ feed fed

Page 9: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

1 lb. gain x $.50/lb. price = $.50

4.0 lb. feed x $.08/lb. cost = $.32

= $1.56 per $ feed fed

1 lb. gain x $.40/lb. price = $.40

3.0 lb. feed x $.12/lb. cost = $.36

= $1.11 per $ feed fed

Page 10: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Economic Efficiency Depends on:

Physical efficiencySelling price (marketing)Cost of resources

Page 11: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Standards of Comparison

BudgetsHistorical records for the same

farmCurrent records from comparable

farms

Page 12: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Financial Analysis

SolvencyLiquidityProfitability

Page 13: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

SOLVENCY: Comparing assets to liabilities

Net worth - $

Debt-to-asset ratio (or other ratio)

Debt-to-asset ratios of 30 % to 40 % are typical, though many farms have no debt.

Page 14: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Leverage: degree in debt Total debt-to-asset ratio

<---10%-------20%--------40%------60%-->

low average high

High leverage means the farm net worth will grow faster when margins are high and lose equity faster when margins are low.

Page 15: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Liquidity(having cash when needed)

Current ratio = current assets current

liabilitiesWorking capital =

(current assets - current liabilities)

Page 16: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

LIQUIDITYCurrent ratio should be 2.0 or better

Farms with continuous sales can have 1.5, but farms with infrequent sales may need 3.0

Working capital typically equals 25 % to 35 % of total expenses (annual)

Page 17: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Profitability - $ (income and expenses)

Net farm income value of unpaid labor ($/year) interest on owner equity (% interest rate x net worth)

= Return to managementThese are opportunity costs

Page 18: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Net Farm Income also depends on how many of your resources you contribute yourself.

Operator labor instead of hired labor.Net worth capital instead of debt.Owned land instead of rented.Net Farm Income is a return to

operator labor, net worth and management.

Page 19: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Example

Net farm income

- value of unpaid labor (15 months @ $3,000)

- value of owner equity

($600,000 net worth @ 4%)

= Return to management

$80,000

$45,000

$24,000

$11,000

Page 20: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Profitability--%Return on Equity (ROE)--%

= (NFI – unpaid labor) / farm net worth

Example:

($80,000 - $45,000) / $600,000 =

$30,000 / $600,000 = 5.0 %

Page 21: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Profitability--%Return on debt capital (interest) =

Interest paid for the year / total liabilities

Example: interest expense = $28,000

liabilities = $400,000

Average interest rate = 7.0%

Page 22: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Return on Assets (ROA)ROA is the combined return on

equity and debt capital= (NFI – unpaid labor + interest expense)

(net worth + liabilities) or total assets

= ($80,000 - $45,000 + $28,000)

($600,000 + $400,000)

= $63,000 / $1,000,000 = 6.3 %

Page 23: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Return on assets (ROA) is an average of the ROE and interest rate

Example: farm capital is 60% equity and 40% debt

ROE = 5 %

Interest rate = 7%

ROA = (.60 x 5%) + (.40 x 7%) = 6.3 %

Page 24: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

PROFITABILITY

Return on assets (ROA)

<---0%-------4%--------8%--------12%--->

low average good

Page 25: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Return on Assets for Iowa Farms

8% 7%6%

-2%

2%

6%

2%5% 5% 5%

8%

15%

6%

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%ROAROE

Page 26: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Return on Assets for Iowa FarmsHigh Third Average, Low Third Average

-12%-10%

-8%-6%-4%-2%0%2%4%6%8%

10%12%14%16%18%20%

%

Page 27: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

Other ratiosGross revenue can be divided into:

operating expense (60 to 70 %)

depreciation (5 to 10 %)

interest (5 to 10 %)

net farm income (15 to 20 %)

High profit farms may keep 25 to 30 % of their gross revenue as net income

Page 28: Farm Business  Analysis—Ch.18

FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES

1. Compare to similar farms.

2. Look at trends over several years.

3. Supplement ratios with production data and enterprise analysis.