Forget Gold, Farmland Is Today's Hottest Investor Safe Haven
by Sterling Wong
Minyanville
With the European
Union heading into a tailspin as its member countries inch closer
to default one by one and with the US federal deficit continuing
to grow, it's safe to say that government bonds are no longer the
safe havens that they once were. What do investors turn to then?
Precious metals like gold, of course.
But I'm always
reminded of what my college economics professor told me: At the
end of the day, whether it's dollars or gold, you value it because
it can be exchanged for a sandwich. If you're starving, the cure
for your pangs is a sandwich, not a bar of gold. So, in a stumbling
global economy like ours, the hottest place to park your money might
be farmland.
In America,
investors in farmland have enjoyed annual returns of close to 11%
in the past 20 years. Through June this year, farmland values are
up 20%, a rate that surpasses that of gold or stocks, as Time
reported
this summer.
"I have
frequently told people that one of the best investments in the world
will be farmland," said legendary investor Jim Rogers of Rogers
Holdings in a Bloomberg
report. "You've got to buy in a place where it rains, and you
have to have a farmer who knows what he's doing. If you can do that,
you will make a double whammy because the crops are becoming more
valuable."
And as BRIC
countries China and India grow their middle classes, the global
demand for food will undoubtedly rise and spur the need to increase
farm output and prices, since the richer you are, the more likely
you are to eat energy-intensive meat.
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the rest of the article
November
3, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Minyanville
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