We are going to continue to see things that have not been seen before 😳😳🤷♂️. Resilience is critical, environmentally and economically. Sometimes an answer comes from a place that you weren’t looking OR never comes because you were asking the wrong question to begin with 🙂
I'm a farmer in the corn belt. My advice is get your income up no matter what. Sell absolutely whatever you can or down grade whatever you can. Seek out different lenders! Some lenders like FCS just have certain financial marks in debt to income that they will not approve. Make a realistic feasible plan with local predictable markets to make the payment and present it to any lender that will listen to you.
@@markhasenour12 thank you! debt to income has definitely been an issue. Student loans throw mine off. We have a plan and a budget. In contact with several lenders. Just wait and see!
Whishing you a Christmas Miracle bud. Uhm one thing you could look into, it would suck, but you could consider selling a good chunk of your cattle. Then using that to expand your faster turn around operations. The chickens, maybe sheep and goats. I know pigs also do well on organic farms.
Hate to be negative, but from what you said, you need to call the auctioneer tomorrow. You need a deep pockets sugar daddy, not banker, to keep that farm going. What have you got to offer a partner a return on his investment, without diluting your equity even more, which will not help you survive. Have a sale, get a job driving a truck. Lots less stressful, and good money to be made.
@@Mark-qq5po a partner could make 7.5% easily if they just took the debt out. Property would still under 75% LTV. There is room to make plenty just still looking for the right person.
$13K an acre for hay ground? Where the hell are you at? Also did you not have crop insurance in 22? Hate to break it but you are likely too far in the hole. Time to sell.
We are going to continue to see things that have not been seen before 😳😳🤷♂️. Resilience is critical, environmentally and economically. Sometimes an answer comes from a place that you weren’t looking OR never comes because you were asking the wrong question to begin with 🙂
@@GeigerFarm very true!
I'm a farmer in the corn belt. My advice is get your income up no matter what. Sell absolutely whatever you can or down grade whatever you can. Seek out different lenders! Some lenders like FCS just have certain financial marks in debt to income that they will not approve. Make a realistic feasible plan with local predictable markets to make the payment and present it to any lender that will listen to you.
@@markhasenour12 thank you! debt to income has definitely been an issue. Student loans throw mine off. We have a plan and a budget. In contact with several lenders. Just wait and see!
Resilience
My first banker told me, I quote.
Loaning money is a tool not a weapon !
@@johnzeit919 definitely understand that
Farm credit services would help you big time.
@@johnzeit919 they said no multiple times. I wish they would help
Whishing you a Christmas Miracle bud.
Uhm one thing you could look into, it would suck, but you could consider selling a good chunk of your cattle. Then using that to expand your faster turn around operations.
The chickens, maybe sheep and goats. I know pigs also do well on organic farms.
Unfortunately we did that 2 years ago. These ones here are leasing pasture from us.
@@americanbeefranch :( thats unfortunate to hear.
Hate to be negative, but from what you said, you need to call the auctioneer tomorrow. You need a deep pockets sugar daddy, not banker, to keep that farm going. What have you got to offer a partner a return on his investment, without diluting your equity even more, which will not help you survive.
Have a sale, get a job driving a truck. Lots less stressful, and good money to be made.
@@Mark-qq5po a partner could make 7.5% easily if they just took the debt out. Property would still under 75% LTV. There is room to make plenty just still looking for the right person.
40 Ltv is already risky
@ not when the crop is worth 350k
What type of hay are you growing?
@ organic alfalfa when its in hay. It 512 acres total. More than just crop ground
$13K an acre for hay ground? Where the hell are you at?
Also did you not have crop insurance in 22?
Hate to break it but you are likely too far in the hole. Time to sell.
@@barm9687 its not just hay ground. The property has more value than just crop ground
Get a job
Ok?