Valuing Forestry Agronomic Potential under Seasonal Mean-Reverting Prices
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Abstract
In the valuation of forest resources, the alternative use of the land is one of the central
themes. In most cases it is made without taking into account the uncertainty and the possible flexibility
of the alternative use. Within these alternatives, the strategy of shifting to a more profitable and
sustainable crop is a well-studied topic in forest research. Although the transformation opportunity
could add great value to the project, the valuation of this flexibility is obviated by traditional
discounted cashflow criteria (NPV). The application of real options theory (ROT) makes it possible
to assess this flexibility based on the uncertainty that the transformation entails. However, the
hypotheses that are made about the future evolution of the underlying asset, in this case the value
of the new crop, may condition the precision of the result. Usually some researchers model these
conversions under the hypothesis of geometric Brownian motion (GBM), hypotheses that are not
plausible when the new crop has a strong seasonal component. In this work, an adapted model
framework is proposed to evaluate forest transformation opportunity into another crop when land
use has both high agronomic potential and high seasonal component, a context in which classic real
options framework is not applicable. As a work based on a theoretical model, after methodological
motivation, the strawberry crop is chosen as alternative due to its seasonal component. Using private
data for this crop, we model through the Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process, with mean-reversion (MR)
to a seasonal component, and then we use of Longstaff and Schwartz’s algorithm to calculate the
option value. The results show that when considering flexibility in option valuation it leads to an
increase on the return of more than 4%. Furthermore, robustness analysis evidence shows that option
value is very sensitive to seasonal component, reinforcing previous evidence that suggests that the
MR process offers a more accurate and appropriate valuation over the traditional GBM in the arena
of agronomic potential valuation. Specifically, the result of valuing this transformation through the
MR process is between 1.5 and 1.7 times the value of the NPV, which results in approximately a
13% annual return. If GBM had been used, the valuation would have been a 72% annual return,
an unrealistic result
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Bibliographic citation
León, Á., Marín, E., & Toscano, D. (2023). Valuing Forestry Agronomic Potential under Seasonal Mean-Reverting Prices. In Forests (Vol. 14, Issue 7, p. 1317). MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14071317













