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If You Invested in Agribank (AGRIP)

Finance and Insurance · All Other Nondepository Credit Intermediation · OTC
Looking for the current price? See the AGRIP quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
N/A
Trading since 2015-07-14
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$0
-100.0% total 0.0% CAGR
Bought on Jul 13, 2021 at $108.75

What $1,000 or $10,000 in AGRIP Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Jul 14, 2015
$1,000 $0 -100% $0 -100% $0 -100%
$10,000 $0 -100% $0 -100% $0 -100%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

AGRIP vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

AGRIP annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2015 $101.50 $100.00 -1.5% -1.5%
2016 $100.00 $106.13 +6.1% +4.6%
2017 $106.00 $112.00 +5.7% +10.3%
2018 $112.00 $103.00 -8.0% +1.5%
2019 $103.00 $107.13 +4.0% +5.5%
2020 $107.13 $113.00 +5.5% +11.3%
2021 $113.00 $108.00 -4.4% +6.4%
2022 $108.00 $103.70 -4.0% +2.2%
2023 $99.95 $0.00 -100.0% -100.0%
2024 $0.00 $0.00 NaN% -100.0%

About Agribank

Finance and Insurance · OTC

AgriBank (AGRIP) is a financial institution in the finance and insurance sector, associated with the All Other Nondepository Credit Intermediation industry classification. According to company disclosures in multiple news releases, AgriBank is part of the customer-owned, nationwide Farm Credit System and is based in St. Paul, Minnesota. Under Farm Credit's cooperative structure, AgriBank is primarily owned by local Farm Credit Associations, which focus on providing financial products and services to rural communities and agriculture.

AgriBank describes itself as obtaining funds and then providing funding and financial solutions to its Association-owners. These Associations, in turn, serve farmers, ranchers, and other Farm Credit borrowers. Together, AgriBank and these Associations compose the AgriBank District, a Farm Credit district that covers a 15-state area stretching from Wyoming to Ohio and from Minnesota to Arkansas, as stated in the company’s public communications.

Company news releases emphasize that AgriBank’s business model is closely tied to the financial strength and performance of its District Associations and their underlying portfolios of retail loans. AgriBank reports on wholesale loans to Associations as well as a portfolio of retail loans, including real estate mortgage loans associated with asset pool program purchases. The bank also references a crop input financing portfolio, which contributes to its non-interest expense through dealer incentive expenses, and notes that its net interest income is influenced by spread income, loan volume, and investment securities mix.

AgriBank’s public financial updates highlight several recurring themes: profitability, credit quality, and liquidity and capital. The bank regularly reports that a high percentage of its total loan portfolio is classified as acceptable, which it identifies as the highest-quality assets. It also discloses liquidity coverage measured in days of maturing debt obligations and states that its capital levels exceed regulatory minimum requirements and buffers. These details underscore AgriBank’s focus on risk management and regulatory capital adequacy within the Farm Credit framework.

In addition to interest income from loans, AgriBank’s news releases describe non-interest income sources such as mineral income, loan fees, loan servicing fees, and distributions from Allocated Insurance Reserve Accounts of the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation. Changes in oil prices, production levels, and fee income are cited as factors affecting these non-interest income components over time.

AgriBank has also used capital markets instruments in its capital structure. The company disclosed that it issued non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock in 2013 to provide the bank and the 15-state Farm Credit District it serves with long-term access to high-quality capital. This preferred stock was used to help ensure the District was positioned to meet the long-term growth and credit needs of farmer and rancher customers. Later news releases explain that AgriBank paid quarterly cash dividends on this preferred stock and ultimately redeemed all issued and outstanding shares in accordance with the terms of the security.

Public communications from AgriBank frequently reference broader agricultural conditions drawn from U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service forecasts and estimates of U.S. net farm income. These references frame the environment in which the Farm Credit Associations and their borrowers operate, including factors such as commodity prices, trade policy, weather, and global agricultural production. AgriBank links these conditions to the performance and risk profile of its loan portfolio and the financial strength of its District Associations.

AgriBank’s governance and leadership structure is not detailed extensively in the provided materials, but one release notes the appointment of a chief financial officer and describes the role as overseeing Controllers, Finance Operations, and Treasury, and contributing to business and strategic planning. This indicates a traditional financial institution management framework aligned with its cooperative ownership and Farm Credit mission.

Overall, AgriBank, as represented by the AGRIP security, positions itself as a customer-owned Farm Credit bank whose primary purpose is to obtain funds and provide funding and financial solutions to Farm Credit Associations serving rural communities and agriculture across a multi-state district. Its public disclosures focus on financial performance, credit quality, capital strength, and its role within the Farm Credit System rather than on retail consumer banking.

View full AGRIP overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Agribank investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Agribank be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Agribank (AGRIP) 10 years ago on 2016-07-13, your investment would be worth $0 today, representing a -100.0% total return, growing at a compounded rate of 0.0% per year (CAGR).

Has Agribank outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, AGRIP returned -100.0% compared to +251.3% for the S&P 500, underperforming the benchmark by 351.3 percentage points.

What is Agribank's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of AGRIP over the past 10 years is 0.0%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — AGRIP's best recent year was 2024 (NaN%) and worst was 2024 (NaN%).

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