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Friday, June 14, 2013
Missouri passed bill to allow foreign land ownership, apparently to clear way for sale of Smithfield
"Last-minute legislative maneuvers in Missouri may remove one
potential legal obstacle to Shuanghui International Holdings' proposed
$4.7 billion purchase of Smithfield Foods Inc, which would be China's largest purchase to date of a U.S. company," report Lisa Baertlein and P.J. Huffstutter
of Reuters. State Rep. Casey Guernsey, whose rural county in northern Missouri has
Smithfield and its pork-producing subsidiaries as its largest taxpayers, passed a bill that would allow 1 percent of the state's agricultural lands to be in foreign ownership, Baertlein and Huffstutter report. "Missouri and at least seven other U.S. states --
Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and
Wisconsin -- have oft-overlooked laws that prohibit foreign ownership of
agricultural land."
The legislation was filed at the behest of foreign
interests, "who already effectively hold about 91,000 acres out of the
state's estimated 29.1 million farmland acres and wanted the laws
changed," Reuters reports. Guernsey's bill and a companion measure "were passed by the legislature on the last day of
its session, less than two weeks before the Smithfield deal was
announced on May 29." Gov. Jay Nixon still needs to sign the bill, and the state's Agriculture Department has to approve the land sales. (Read more)
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