NZ Rural Land Company Lifts Annual Profit in 2025
New Zealand Rural Land Company (NZL) has lifted its annual profit on the back of being a "disciplined, yield-focused land vehicle", the company says.
OPINION: New Zealanders have a love affair with property investment. After securing a family home, buying a rental property is traditionally seen as a safe way to build wealth over the long term.
However, the increasing regulatory complexities of being a landlord, recent high interest rates, and softening house prices have encouraged investors with a passion for property to consider an alternative: a Listed Property Vehicle (LPV) – also known overseas as a Real Estate Investment Trust.
LPVs deploy investors’ funds to finance the purchase and ownership of various classes of commercial property. They provide a way for investors to gain a stake in large-scale, income-producing real estate assets without having to buy, manage, or finance these properties directly. Typically, they deliver regular income in the form of dividends.
In contrast to privately held commercial real estate investments, listed LPVs provide investors the ability to buy or sell shares based on readily available information and transparent valuations.
New Zealand Rural Land Co (NZL) is a LPV – investing specifically in New Zealand agricultural, horticultural, and forestry land.
While some LPVs also operate and maintain their property investments, NZL owns only the land. We reduce investors’ exposure to operational risks by leasing our properties to tenants under triple net leases.
Triple net leases are a type of commercial lease arrangement where the tenant is responsible for paying not only the base rent but also the property’s operating expenses, including property taxes, insurance, and maintenance costs. Triple net leases often include inflationary clauses so they can be adjusted on a regular basis to reflect consumer price index (CPI) movements.
All of NZL’s leases have annual to three-year lease terms that increase at the rate of inflation.
We partner with our tenants to issue leases from 10-20 years in length, and we ladder our portfolio lease maturities such that at any given point in time, our weighted average lease term (WALT) is about 12 years.
NZL’s 17,457 hectares of rural land (255 of which is owned by specialist private markets investment manager Roc Partners) are spread across a range of diverse properties and tenants. Our strategy of growing our portfolio across agriculture, horticulture and forestry assets is designed to deliver attractive risk-adjusted shareholder returns through asset value appreciation and cashflow from long-term leases.
A high-interest rate environment typically results in lower valuations and profitability for the property sector, and LPVs.
However, a fixation on the impact of interest rates – in the case of NZL – is misplaced.
Our regular CPIadjusted lease reviews mean higher inflation results in higher than anticipated rental growth. NZL has received CPI adjusted rental payments from all 18 properties due for review by mid-2024.
CPI for the three years ending mid- 2024 was +18.6% and represents a period of strong inflationary pressures. NZL’s dairy leases undergo CPI review every three years, while horticultural and forestry leases undergo CPI annual review.
In summary, investment in NZL - a listed LPV with triple net leases and a diversified portfolio – offers property investors yields cushioned from inflationary impacts, and asset value appreciation over the long term, without the obligations and risks that go with being a landlord.
Richard Milsom is director, New Zealand Rural Land Management
A partnership between Canterbury milk processor Synlait and the world's largest food producer, Nestlé, has been celebrated with a visit to a North Canterbury farm by a group including senior staff from Synlait, the Ravensdown subsidiary EcoPond, and Nestlé's Switzerland head office.
Canterbury milk processor Synlait is blaming what it calls "a perfect storm" of setbacks for a big loss in its half year result for the six months ended January 31, 2026.
More of the same please, says Federated Farmers dairy chair Karl Dean when asked about who should succeed Miles Hurrell as Fonterra chief executive.
A Waikato farmer who set up a 'tinder' for cows - using artificial intelligence to find the perfect bull for each cow - days the first-year results are better than expected.
Fonterra says it's keeping an eye on the Middle East crisis and its implications for global supply chains.
The closure of the McCain processing plant and the recent announcement of 300 job losses at Wattie’s underscore the mounting pressure facing New Zealand’s manufacturing sector, Buy NZ Made says.

OPINION: If you ask this old mutt, the choice at the next election isn't shaping up as a contest of…
OPINION: A mate of yours says we're long overdue for a reckoning on what value farmers really get for the…