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Capital and the Use of Credit Chapter 19

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Title: Capital and the Use of Credit Chapter 19


1
Capital andthe Use of Credit(Chapter 19)
2
Objectives
  • Discuss the importance of capital.
  • Illustrate the optimal use and allocation of
    capital.
  • Compare different sources of capital and credit.
  • Describe different types of loans.
  • Show how to set up different loan repayment
    plans.
  • Explain how to establish and develop credit
    worthiness.
  • Examine the factors that affect the liquidity and
    solvency of a farm business.

3
What is capital?
  • Cash.
  • Balances in checking and savings accounts.
  • Money invested in
  • Livestock.
  • Machinery.
  • Buildings.
  • Land.
  • Other assets that are bought and sold.

4
Capital in Agriculture
  • Agriculture has one of the largest capital
    investments per worker of any major U.S. industry
    (capital intensive)
  • Makes farm operators very productive.
  • Farm numbers have been declining.
  • More capital in land, buildings, livestock,
    machinery.

5
Credit
  • The ability to borrow money with a promise to
    repay the money in the future and pay a rate of
    interest for its use
  • Critically important to capital acquisition and
    use.
  • Lets you acquire productive assets and pay for
    them later with the income they generate.

6
Economics of Capital Use
  • Capital The money invested in the physical
    inputs used in agricultural production
  • Purchase or rent productive assets
  • Land, livestock, equipment
  • Pay for chemicals, seed, feed, labor and other
    inputs.
  • Finance family living and other personal
    expenditures.

7
Economics of Capital Use
  • Basic questions to be answered
  • How much total capital should be used?
  • How should limited capital be allocated among its
    many potential uses?

8
Economics of Capital Use
  • How much total capital should be used?
  • Capital is an input.
  • Decision rule to find the optimal amount of an
    input to use MVP MIC
  • MVP The additional net return, before interest
    payments, that result from an additional dollar
    of capital investment.
  • MIC The additional dollar of capital plus the
    interest that must be paid to use it.

9
Optimal Capital Use
10
Economics of Capital Use
  • How should limited capital be allocated among its
    many potential uses?
  • What if capital is limited to something less than
    the amount that will maximize total profit?
  • Decision rule to allocate a limited input to its
    optimal uses Equal Marginal Principle
  • The marginal value of the last dollar is equal in
    all uses.

11
Sources of Capital
  • Owner Equity
  • Outside Equity
  • Leasing
  • Contracting
  • Credit

12
Sources of Capital
  • Owner Equity
  • The farmers own capital.
  • Total assets minus total liabilities.
  • Most farmers begin with a contribution of
    original capital
  • Savings
  • Gifts
  • Inheritances
  • Retained earnings from the farm business can be
    reinvested.
  • Increases in asset value.
  • Nonfarm or investment income.

13
Sources of Capital
  • Outside Equity
  • Investors willing to contribute capital to a farm
    or ranch without being the operator.
  • Share lease agreements
  • Landowner may contribute operating capital.
  • Landowner may provide equipment and breeding
    livestock.
  • Limited partners.
  • Corporations may sell stock.

14
Sources of Capital
  • Leasing
  • Advantages
  • Cheaper than owning.
  • Easier to change the amount or kind of assets.
  • Disadvantages
  • Uncertainty about the availability of land.
  • Discourages long-term improvements.

15
Sources of Capital
  • Contracting
  • Contracting services to other agribusiness firms
  • Restricted access to capital or credit.
  • Want to limit financial risk.
  • Examples included custom feeding, custom crop
    farming, contracted broiler production.
  • Operator provides
  • Labor, management, equipment, buildings.
  • Contractor (agribusiness firm) pays for other
    inputs.
  • Operator receives a fixed payment per unit of
    production.

16
Sources of Capital
  • Credit
  • Capital obtained from lenders.
  • Can help the business
  • Grow more rapidly.
  • Improve efficiency.
  • Spread purchases over time.
  • Withstand temporary periods of negative cash
    flow.
  • Second largest source of capital in agriculture
    after owner equity.

17
Types of Loans
  • Classified by
  • Length of repayment.
  • Use of funds.
  • Type of security.

18
Length of Repayment
  • Short-Term Loans
  • Intermediate-Term Loans
  • Long-Term Loans

19
Length of Repayment
  • Short-Term Loans
  • Less than 1 year (current liability).
  • Production or operating loans
  • Fertilizer, seed, feeder livestock, feed
    (variable inputs).
  • Repayment is due when the crops or marketable
    livestock are sold.

20
Length of Repayment
  • Intermediate-Term Loans
  • More than 1 year but less than 10 years
    (noncurrent liability).
  • One or more payment due each year
  • Machinery.
  • Breeding and dairy livestock.
  • Some buildings.

21
Length of Repayment
  • Long-Term Loans
  • More than 10 years (noncurrent).
  • Annual or semiannual payments
  • Land and other real estate.

22
Use of Funds
  • Real Estate Loans
  • Non-Real Estate Loans
  • Personal Loans

23
Use of Funds
  • Real Estate Loans
  • Loans for the purchase of real estate
  • Land.
  • Buildings.
  • Real estate assets serve as security.
  • Typically long term
  • 20 to 40 years.

24
Use of Funds
  • Non-Real Estate Loans
  • All business loans other than real estate loans.
  • Short-term or intermediate-term.
  • Security
  • Crops, livestock, machinery, and other non-real
    estate assets.

25
Use of Funds
  • Personal Loans
  • Non-business loans used to purchase personal
    assets.
  • Homes, vehicles, appliances.

26
Security
  • Assets pledged to the lender to ensure loan
    repayment
  • Often called collateral.
  • If the borrower cant make the principal and
    interest payments
  • Lender can take possession of secured assets.
  • Assets can be sold by lender.
  • Proceeds are used to pay off loan.

27
Security
  • Secured Loans
  • Some asset is mortgaged to provide collateral for
    the loan.
  • Preferred by lenders.
  • Intermediate and long-term loans
  • Equipment or parcel of land as collateral.
  • Some include a blanket security statement.
  • Can include assets acquired or produced after the
    loan is obtained.
  • Growing crops, for example.

28
Security
  • Unsecured Loans
  • A promise to repay.
  • No specific collateral is pledged.
  • Signature loan
  • Borrowers signature is the only security.
  • Lenders are discouraged from making unsecured
    loans.

29
Repayment Plans
  • Single Payment Loan
  • Line of Credit
  • Amortized Loan
  • Balloon Payment Loan

30
Repayment Plans
  • Single Payment Loan
  • Principal and interest are payable in one lump
    sum.
  • Short-term operating loans.
  • Requires good cash flow planning for repayment.
  • Simple interest
  • Repay principal interest P X i X T (in
    years).
  • 10,000 borrowed for 6 months at 6
  • Repay 10,000 10,000 X 0.06 X (6/12 or 0.5)
    or 10,300.

31
Repayment Plans
  • Line of Credit
  • Loan funds are transferred into a business
    account as needed, up to an approved maximum
    amount.
  • Borrower
  • Pays the accumulated interest on the loan first.
  • Then applies the rest of the funds to the
    principal.
  • No fixed repayment schedule or amount.
  • Reduces borrowers interest costs.
  • Less time spent in loan approval process.

32
Line of Credit(40,000)
  •  

Sep 1. Interest due (20,000 X 0.12 X 7/12)
(10,000 X 0.12 X 5/12)
1,400
500 1,900 Dec 1.
Interest due (14,400 X 0.12 X 1/12) (14,400
X 0.11 X 2/12)
144
264 408
33
Repayment Plans
  • Amortized Loan
  • Periodic interest and principal payments.
  • Installment loan
  • As the principal is repaid and the loan balance
    declines, the interest payments also decline.
  • Interest is paid
  • Only on the unpaid loan balance.
  • Only for the length of time that amount was
    borrowed.

34
Repayment Plans
  • Amortized Loan
  • Two types of amortization plans
  • Equal principal payment
  • Same amount of principal each payment.
  • Plus interest on the unpaid balance.
  • 2. Equal total payment
  • All payments are the same amount.
  • Easier for new or expanding businesses.

35
Equal Principal versus Equal Payment Amortization
(100,000)
36
Equal Principal versus Equal Payment Amortization
Note table value from Table 1 (10 years at 8)
0.14903
37
Repayment Plans
  • Balloon Payment Loan
  • Payments balloon in size
  • Small periodic payments (interest only?).
  • Large final payment.
  • More total interest cost.
  • May require refinancing to make the balloon
    payment(s).

38
Repayment Plans
  • Balloon Payment Loan
  • Principal has not been consistently repaid during
    the loan period
  • Half of the principal may be paid with the
    periodic payments, with the other half due at the
    end of the loan period.
  • Periodic payments may be interest only, with all
    the principal due at the end of the loan period.
  • Small principal payments throughout, and then a
    large principal payment at the end.
  • etc., since several different possible
    combinations.

39
The Cost of Borrowing
  • Interest Rates
  • (APR) Annual Percentage Rate.
  • Other fees
  • Loan closing fees or points.
  • Appraisal fees.
  • Other fees.

40
The Cost of Borrowing
  • Comparing the cost of different plans
  • Calculate the dollar amount to be repaid in each
    time period
  • Principal, interest, other fees.
  • Find the discounted present value of the series
    of payments
  • Use the same discount rate for each alternative.
  • Find the NPV, or true cost, of the loan
  • IRR to the lender if want in percentage terms.

41
The Cost of Borrowing
  • FixedRate Loans
  • Interest rate remains the same
  • Lenders may dislike because the rate they must
    pay to obtain funds may change.
  • Borrowers dislike if they think interest rates
    may decrease.
  • Typically have higher interest rates than
    variable-rate loans.

42
The Cost of Borrowing
  • VariableRate Loans
  • Allow for adjustment of the interest rate
    periodically
  • Usually annually.
  • Typically have lower initial interest rates than
    fixed-rate loans.
  • Can you evaluate cost of fixed versus variable?
  • How to choose?

43
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Commercial Banks
  • Farm Credit System
  • Life Insurance Companies
  • Farm Service Agency
  • Individuals and Suppliers
  • Other sources

44
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Commercial Banks
  • Largest source of nonreal estate loans for
    agriculture.
  • Proximity to customers.
  • Also provide checking\savings accounts and other
    financial services.
  • Small banks may arrange for credit to be supplied
    through a correspondent bank.

45
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Farm Credit System
  • Established by Congress in 1916
  • Government funds were used initially.
  • Now a private cooperative owned by its
    members/borrowers.
  • Supervised, audited, and regulated by the Farm
    Credit Administration.

46
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Farm Credit System
  • Obtain loan funds by selling bonds
  • Proceeds are made available to seven district
    Farm Credit Banks across the country.
  • Provide funds to local associations.
  • Loans may be used to purchase
  • Livestock, machinery, buildings, and land.
  • Short-term operating credit.

47
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Life Insurance Companies
  • Acquire funds from the premiums paid on life
    insurance policies and from other earnings and
    reserve funds.
  • Funds are placed in various investments
  • Long-term agricultural real estate loans.
  • Prefer large farm real estate loans.
  • Usually over 500,000.

48
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Farm Service Agency (FSA)
  • Part of US Department of Agriculture.
  • Farm ownership and operating loans
  • Some necessary qualifications.
  • Emergency loans to qualified farmers and ranchers
    in officially declared disaster areas
  • Flood and drought.

49
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Farm Service Agency (FSA)
  • Moved from direct loans toward more guaranteed
    loans
  • A lender provides the loan funds.
  • FSA guarantees up to 95 repayment in case of
    default by the borrower.
  • Most are granted to beginning farmers.

50
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Individuals and Suppliers
  • Real estate and nonreal estate loans
  • Relatives or friends.
  • Accounts payable at farm supply stores, or input
    manufacturing firms.
  • Many suppliers allow 30, 60, or 90 days to pay
    before interest is charged.

51
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Individuals and Suppliers
  • Seller financed land sales
  • Seller transfers possession of the land.
  • Buyer makes periodic payments.
  • Tax benefits for the seller.
  • Buyer can negotiate
  • Lower down payment.
  • Lower interest rate.
  • More flexible repayment terms.

52
Sources of Loan Funds
  • Other sources
  • Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
  • Federal government entity.
  • Short-term loans using stored crops as
    collateral.
  • Made at a fixed rate per bushel or pound.
  • Small Business Administration (SBA)
  • Make some agricultural loans.
  • Emergency loan program for farmers in disaster
    areas.

53
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Personal Character
  • Management Ability
  • Financial Position
  • Repayment Capacity
  • Purpose of the Loan
  • Collateral

54
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Personal Character
  • Characteristics considered by lenders
  • Honesty, Integrity, Judgment, Reputation.
  • To maintain a good credit record
  • Promptly inform lenders changes in the financial
    condition of the farming operation that may
    affect repayment.
  • Be honest and open with lenders.

55
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Management Ability
  • Lenders often rate poor management ability as the
    number one reason for borrowers getting into
    financial difficulty
  • Past records
  • Background
  • Education
  • Training

56
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Financial Position
  • Accurate, well-prepared
  • Balance sheets.
  • Income statements.
  • Cash flow budget
  • A record of good financial progress over time can
    be just as important as the current financial
    position.

57
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Repayment Capacity
  • Measured by the cash flow of the business
  • Cash flow budget for one or more years.
  • Money is often borrowed for a profitable business
    only to find that cash flow in the early years is
    not sufficient
  • Longer-loan terms.
  • More flexible repayment schedule.

58
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Purpose of the Loan
  • Self-liquidating loans
  • Fertilizer, seed, feeder livestock.
  • Can be repaid from the sale of crops or
    livestock.
  • Easier to obtain.
  • Capital asset loans
  • Land, machinery.
  • Must generate additional revenue without being
    sold themselves.
  • May require extra collateral.

59
Establishing and Developing Credit
  • Collateral
  • Loans shouldnt be made or requested unless
    repayment can be projected from farm income.
  • If unexpected happens, they want collateral
  • Land
  • Buildings
  • Livestock
  • Machinery
  • Stored grain
  • Growing crops

60
Factors Affecting Liquidity
  • Business Growth
  • Non-business Income/Expenditures
  • Debt Characteristics
  • Debt Structure

61
Factors Affecting Liquidity
  • Business Growth
  • Holding back inventories of young breeding
    livestock or feed.
  • Construction of new buildings.
  • Purchases of land or machinery.
  • Investing in new technology.

62
Factors Affecting Liquidity
  • Non-business Income Expenditures
  • Basic family living expenses must be met.
  • A dependable source of outside income
  • Stabilize resources for family living expenses.
  • Support farm during periods of negative cash
    flow.
  • More and more off-farm income.

63
Factors Affecting Liquidity
  • Debt Characteristics
  • The rates and terms of credit may affect cash
    flow as much as the amount of debt incurred
  • Find the lowest available interest rate.
  • When necessary, use longer-term debt or balloon
    payment loans.

64
Factors Affecting Liquidity
  • Debt Structure
  • The distribution of debt among
  • Current
  • Intermediate
  • Long-term liabilities
  • Loan payment terms should correspond to the class
    of assets that they were used to acquire.

65
Summary
  • Capital includes money invested in machinery,
    livestock, buildings, cash, and bank account
    balances.
  • Sources of capital that are available to farmers
    include the operators own equity, equity from
    outside investors, leased or contracted assets,
    and borrowed funds.

66
Summary
  • Interest rates, loan terms, and repayment
    schedules vary from lender to lender and by loan
    type.
  • Borrowers should compare the annual percentage
    rate of interest, loan fees, variable rate
    provisions, and other loan terms when shopping
    for credit.
  • Ag. loans are available from commercial banks,
    the Farm Credit System, life insurance companies,
    government agencies, individuals, and other
    sources.

67
Summary
  • Borrowers should work at improving their credit
    by maintaining good personal character, improving
    management skills, demonstrating adequate
    financial progress and repayment capacity, and
    providing sufficient collateral.
  • Liquidity is affected by business growth,
    nonbusiness income and expenses, and the
    characteristics and structure of the debt held.
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