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50381569 No.50381569 [Reply] [Original]

Is buying agriculture land and giving it up for rent to local wheat farmers a good investment? I can afford about 10 hectares in eastern europe for starters, should be a slow, stable income

>> No.50381795
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50381795

Answer you niggers, your shitcoins are not going to save you

>> No.50381884

>>50381569
Was this gateway background an AI generated image

>> No.50381924

Until the government repossesses it from you for climate change

>> No.50382002

>>50381884
Nope, its a real place. Its a vineyard now, I believe.

>> No.50382358

I always thought about doing the opposite, renting spare land off a farmer and use that to start off your own small crop.

I remember a friends dad was trying to tell us to get into farming when we were younger, we never listented to him, he had a modest house but my friend said he had over a million dollars worth of equipment that he owned outright, that was one of the ways he said you could get started by leasing a small bit of land

>> No.50383906

>>50381569
if youre still lurking i would try and keep it domestic or at least somewhere without a history of stiffing foreign investors, but otherwise owning good land is never a bad idea if you can hold onto it

>> No.50383928

>>50381569
>should be a slow, stable income
Agriculture is anything but stable unless it's in a location with robust crop insurance and government subsidies

>> No.50383950

>>50381569
I doubt farmers would want to maintain leased land for crops but they do this all the time with livestock. I plan on doing it just so I can live in grass fields.

>> No.50384662

>>50381884
>AI generated image
>2001

>> No.50387360
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50387360

>>50381569
Yes, but give me a sec to format response

>> No.50387461
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50387461

American cropland is the absolute gold standard, simply because everyone else has it way worse. Our bigass commodity crops of legumes and grains are produced by the plains, which gets surprisingly consistent rainfall, gets a bug killing hard frost every year, and enjoys a long growing season. Our fruit and nut harvest comes out of the west coast and south east. If you can afford American land to rent, I say do it, but figure out what actual agricultural landholders due to screen for good tenants. An easier way would be to invest in agricultural REITs, where you fund a farm landlord (gladstone land does fruits and nuts, FPI is commodity grains and beans). I like gladstone simply because they advertise exactly how many acre feet of banked water they have on hand. Alternatively if you have 10k USD, there are "sustainable and regenerative" agriculture loans you can fund with a pretty good rate of return.

I don't know shit about eastern europe except that its poised to be the flash point for the next few years and I'm shorting the fuck out of anything European. If you really want to "buy when there's blood in the streets" try to get exposure to Russian companies that build heavy equipment, because the first thing they want to do when Ukraine falls is get the grain terminals back online.