KEY POINTS
  • Farmland values in America's heartland are still stable, despite pressures on farm incomes and rising interest rates, according to a quarterly report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
  • At the same time, some states, such as Texas and North Dakota, have shown even stronger farmland values as a result of the oil boom.
  • "Despite lower farm income, weak credit conditions and higher interest rates, farm real estate values generally remained stable," the KC Fed says in its latest quarterly survey of the agriculture industry.
Corn and soybeans grow on a farm on July 13, 2018 near Tipton, Iowa.

Farmland values in America's heartland are still stable, despite pressures on farm incomes and rising interest rates, according to a quarterly report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

At the same time, some states, such as Texas and North Dakota, have shown even stronger farmland values as a result of the oil boom.