Agricultural real estate investment trusts "are the new buyers on the block, unlocking potentially billions of dollars of cash to the rural real estate market," Marcia Zarley Taylor reports for DTN The Progressive Farmer. Paul Pittman, CEO of Farmland Partners, told Taylor, "We're permanent, we're stable and we want to
bring investment capital into U.S. agriculture. Farmers who find
themselves in a little financial difficulty the next few years will look
at us as their friend."
Farmland Partners "launched its
initial public offering in April raising $53 million, seeded with the
$100 million of farm real estate Pittman has been accumulating since
1996," Taylor writes. "It was the first REIT to specialize in row-crop real estate. By
mid-year, FPI owned 41 farms with 23,630 acres in Illinois, Nebraska and
Colorado, along with three grain storage facilities. It had five farms
under contract in Arkansas, Louisiana and Nebraska totaling another
4,075 acres."
But "the farm community has mixed opinions about
outsider interest in farm ownership," Taylor writes. "Some states even maintain
anti-corporate farm ownership laws on the books although few have
enforced those provisions since a Nebraska Supreme Court ruled its
version unconstitutional almost a decade ago. On the other hand,
fast-growing farmers like to partner with REITs as a way to expand their
operations on someone else's dime. They see it as a way to lock in
rental land."
"After the run up in commodity prices from
2006-2012, 'there's a whole wave of money from strange places headed to
agriculture, including outside investors,' says David Freshwater, a
University of Kentucky ag economist," Taylor writes. (Read more)
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