The Land Expectation Value and the Forest Value Lecture 6 (4/20/2016)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Time Value of Money Interest –Market price of money Supply – lending rate Demand – borrow rate Difference – margin for lender –Makes values at different.
Advertisements

Net Present Value (NPV) for a Single Rotation NPV may include the initial cost of land and land value at time r where, N t = net cash flow in year t (R.
Timber Management Elements of Forestry Kenneth Williams
Annuities and No Arbitrage Pricing. Key concepts  Real investment  Financial investment.
The economics of forest management National and international forest policy.
SOUND Management: Delayed Harvest Questions & More Mark Megalos NCSU University Extension Forestry.
Forestry economics1 ECON 4925 Autumn 2006 Resource Economics Forestry economics Lecturer: Finn R. Førsund.
 Homework #9 Due Thursday  Quiz #4 Thursday  Group Outline Due Thursday  Exam #4 – Dec. 1 st  Group Presentations – Dec. 6 & 8.
Economic efficiency criteria n Static efficiency – Maximize net benefits of one optimal rotation n Dynamic efficiency – Maximize net benefits from continuous.
Optimal Rotation Optimal Rotation.
Economics of Forestland Use and Even-Aged Rotations Land tends to be used for the activity that generates the greatest NPV of future satisfaction to the.
Last Study Topics What To Discount IM&C Project. Today’s Study Topics Project Analysis Project Interaction – Equivalent Annual Cost – Replacement – Project.
The economics of forest plantations and on-farm planting as a rural income-generating activity Claire Coote Issues for the Sustainable Use of Biomass Resources.
McGraw-Hill /Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. May 31 Capital Budgeting Decisions.
Forest Valuation and Appraisal The major organization for consulting foresters who do appraisal work.
Inflation and Forest Investment Analysis What’s real?
Financial Analysis Lecture 5 (4/13/2015). Financial Analysis   Evaluates management alternatives based on financial profitability;   Evaluates the.
Appendix B: A Brief Review of the Time Value of Money Concepts.
Economics of Timber Production on Private Land in Indiana.
Soil Expectation Value (SEV) Financial criteria used to make even-aged timber management decisions. Simply the year zero value of a perpetual series of.
Optimal rotation age (ORA) Dynamic optimization problem Long discussed in economic literature Shorter rotation – benefit arrives earlier – earlier replanting.
Timber vs. Row Crops Under what circumstance can conversion of forestland to crop land be justified financially? William L. Hoover.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Chapter Three Opportunity Cost of Capital and of Capital and Capital Budgeting.
What Do You See? Message of the Day: The management objective determines whether a site is over, under, or fully stocked.
Economic Concepts Related to Appraisals. Time Value of Money The basic idea is that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar tomorrow Why? – Consumption.
Uneven-aged Management II. Lecture 10 (5/4/2015).
Managing the Bayfield County Forest. Logging Northern Wisconsin Agriculture was the goal Wisconsin led nation in timber production: 3.3 billion.
Economics of Timber Production on Private Land in Indiana.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 4 Future Value, Present Value and Interest Rates.
FIN 614: Financial Management Larry Schrenk, Instructor.
Optimal Rotation. Biological vs. Economic Criteria  What age should we harvest timber?  Could pick the age to yield a certain size  Or could pick an.
Time Value of Money Managerial Accounting Prepared by Diane Tanner University of North Florida Chapter 14.
Overview of Financial Analysis
Forest Valuation and Appraisal The major organization for consulting foresters who do appraisal work.
Financial analysis of growing koa High present costs Revenues far in the future Markets changing.
Forest Regulation Concepts
FORS 8450 Advanced Forest Planning Lecture 21 Binary Search.
LEV and the Forest Value Lecture 5 (04/13/2015). The Financially Optimal Rotation Age.
Derived Demand, Timber Values, & Rent Chapters 3 and 10.
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting
Chapter 5 Sound Management 1. Sound Management Defined Sound management is a program of production designed to obtain the greatest net return from the.
CDAE Class 07 Sept. 18 Last class: Result of Quiz 1 2. Review of economic and business concepts Today: 2. Review of economic and business concepts.
Engineering Economic Analysis Canadian Edition
AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE year old Loblolly Pine plantation.
Analytical Tools Marginal Discounted cash flow Benefit-cost Supply-demand.
Analytical Tools Marginal analysis Discounted cash flow.
Capital Budgeting MF 807 Corporate Finance Professor Thomas Chemmanur.
Chapter 4 Income Requirements 1. Initial Qualifying Tract Agricultural Land Income Requirement: –The farm unit must have at least one tract that has 10.
CDAE Class 07 Sept. 19 Last class: Result of Quiz 1 2. Review of economic and business concepts Today: 2. Review of economic and business concepts.
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation. 2 BASIC PRINCIPAL Would you rather have $1,000 today or $1,000 in 30 years?  Why?
Opportunity Cost of Capital and Capital Budgeting Chapter Three Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 Calculating the profit or loss of a business. * Profit (what it is and why it matters) * Purpose and main elements of profit/ loss account All students….
Beyond the Basic Forest Resource Model Monday, April 10.
Growth and Yield Lecture 6 (04/17/2015). Overview   Review of stand characteristics that affect growth   Basic Stand Growth Terminology Yield curve;
Analytical Tools Marginal analysis Discounted cash flow.
Forest Management with Linear Programming Lecture 3 (4/6/2015)
Presentation outline (12/7/2010) Concept of Land Expectation Value Derivation of formula LEV calculation of timberland Calculation of Net Future Value.
Analytical Tools Marginal analysis Discounted cash flow.
Farmland Purchase Analysis. Resources ISU Ag. Decision Maker; – Farmland Purchase analysis – Farmland values – Costs of production – Price assumptions.
FORESTRY LAND USE Overview and Update Buckingham County Land Use Work Session September 18, 2017 Dean Cumbia Forest Resource Management Branch.
Alternative Investments
Financial Analysis Lecture 4 (4/12/2017).
The Land Expectation Value and the Forest Value
Stand-Level Management Planning
Uneven-aged Management II.
Lecture: 6 Course Code: MBF702
Forest Management with Linear Programming
Estimating the value of forest land by using the direct approach
Forest Resources Monday, April 4.
Presentation transcript:

The Land Expectation Value and the Forest Value Lecture 6 (4/20/2016)

The value of forest land The Land Expectation Value:* considers the value of bare land at the start of an even-aged forest rotation; The Forest Value: considers the value of land and trees at any stage of stand development; Transaction Evidence Approach: is based on identifying recent sales with similar properties. *Note: LEV is also known as the Soil Expectation Value, Willingness to Pay for Land or Bare Land Value or Bare Land Value

Definition of LEV The Land Expectation Value (LEV) is the net present value of an infinite series of identical, even-aged forest rotations, starting from bare land. Major Assumption of LEV: the rotations are identical

The LEV can be used: To identify optimal even-aged management regimes for forest stands where the primary objective is to maximize financial returns; To estimate the value of forestland without standing timber that is used for growing timber.

Limitations of LEV LEV is a poor predictor of forestland value if the main value of land is not timber related; LEV can be used to estimate the opportunity costs of various management regimes; Prices and costs are assumed to be constant (use real rate).

Calculation of LEV Thinning Final harvest EstablishmentPruning Tax Basic types of costs & revenues: 1.Establishment costs (e.g., site prep., planting) 2.Annual costs and revenues (e.g., property tax, hunting leases) 3.Intermediate costs and revenues (thinnings, pruning, etc.) 4.Final net revenue

Calculation of LEV Method 1: 1.Calculate the present value of the first rotation; 2.Convert the present value to a future value; 3.Apply the infinite periodic payment formula Thinning Final harvest EstablishmentPruning Tax

Calculation of LEV Method 2: 1.Calculate the future value of the first rotation; 2.Apply the infinite periodic payment formula Thinning Final harvest EstablishmentPruning Tax

Calculation of LEV Method 3: 1.Calculate the future value of the first rotation, ignoring the annual costs and revenues: 2.Apply the infinite periodic payment formula Thinning Final harvest EstablishmentPruning Tax

A Loblolly Pine Example Management Activity Cost/Revenue ($/acre) Timing Present Value of First Rotation Future Value of First Rotation Reforestation $ $1, Brush control $37.36-$ Thinning cost $41.88-$ Thinning revenue $62.36$ Property tax 3.00annual-$45.14-$ Hunting lease 1.00annual$15.05$ Final harvest 3, $291.67$3, Total$119.69$1, Calculate the per acre LEV using a 6% real alternative rate of return.

Method 1: 1.Convert PV of 1 st rotation to FV: 2.Apply the infinite periodic payment formula for this future value: Method 2: is identical to Step 2 in Method 1;

Method 3: 1.Calculate FV of 1st rotation without annual costs/revenues : 2.Apply the infinite periodic payment formula for this future value: 3.Apply and deduct the infinite annual series of net revenues:

LEV and MAI CMAI

Land Expectation Value: present value of costs and revenues from an infinite series of identical even-aged forest rotations starting from bare land; Forest Value (a generalization of LEV): the present value of a property with an existing stand of trees + the present value of a LEV for all future rotations of timber that will be grown on the property after harvesting the current stand.

The Forest Value allows us: To determine when a given stand should be cut; To separate the management of the current stand from that of future stands; To account for price changes that might occur during the life of the current stand; Note: We will still assume that the rotations and prices associated with the future stands (i.e., the stands that are established after the current stand is cut) will be the same.

Time (years) $5/ac Property tax $84/ac Stand impro- vement cut $5,948/ac Cut current stand now $4,400/ac Cut future stand … Time (years) $84/ac Stand impro- vement cut $4,400/ac Cut future stand … $7,884/ac Cut after 10 yrs

When to cut the stand? Cut it now: –Forest Value = Current Timber Value + LEV $5,948/ac

When to cut the stand? Cut it 10 years from now: –Forest Value = Present Value of Costs and Revenues for first 10 years + Present Value of LEV

Forest Value Assumptions: 1.The current stand will be harvested; 2.A new stand will be established; 3.All future rotations of the new stand will be identical. Definition: –The Forest Value is the present value of the projected costs and revenues from an existing forest tract, plus the present value of an infinite series of identical future forest rotations that starts after the current tract is harvested.

Calculating the Forest Value New notation: Forest Value formula:

Land value and timber value Forest Value = Land Value + Timber Value –Land Value = LEV –Timber Value = Forest Value – LEV

What if real prices change? Assumption: the price changes will end by the end of the current rotation When calculating the LEV, use the new, steady state price: P p,∞

An example Cut now:

Cut in 10 yrs: