The total area of the ten properties is about 11,650 hectares.
"One of the nice things about the Landcorp properties is that they're really good custodians of the land so they're really well looked after so if things aren't right they're fixed, and they're well managed," Newbold said.
"When you take, for example, that Copper Road property, you're just walking into a magnificent property that's been well-looked after and well-managed. So it's a nice thing when you're taking properties like that to the market."
Newbold said there had not been interest from offshore buyers at this stage. He anticipated that the majority of interest would come from regional players, followed by national players - "that's where potentially some offshore players could come in, but they're a smaller group and players that are already in the market".
"Most of these properties will lend themselves to a regional player," he said.
Landcorp, the former Department of Lands and Survey, owns 158,000ha of farmland in New Zealand and manages or leases another 226,000ha. It runs 1.6 million stock units (sheep, beef, deer and dairy) on 137 properties and has a staff of about 700.
A Landcorp spokesman said a large part of the organisation's wealth was in its land holdings and the sale of these properties would help it to invest in its future strategy.
"This has been signaled quite some time, we've bought and sold 140 farms to date and this is just about ensuring that we make the right use of our assets and that we have the right structure of farms for what we want to do going forward," he said.
"To invest you've got to free up assets so essentially it's a case of selling and re-investing."
Labour Party Primary Industries Spokesman Damien O'Connor called the sale a "desperate move" to inject cash into the Government's coffers.
"There will be some who think this will provide opportunities for young New Zealand farmers to get a foot in the door and I'm hoping that is an outcome. But if they are gobbled up by foreign investors then New Zealand is certainly a lot worse off.
"There are clearly a couple of prime properties there that one would have thought should have remained a core part of their portfolio. New Zealanders own these farms through Landcorp, they should be proud of that."