by TJ_98370 » Thu Jun 05, 2008 9:55 am
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Huge investment funds have already poured hundreds of billions of dollars into booming financial markets for commodities like wheat, corn and soybeans.
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But a few big private investors are starting to make bolder and longer-term bets that the world's need for food will greatly increase — by buying farmland, fertilizer, grain elevators and shipping equipment.....
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.....And three institutional investors, including the giant BlackRock fund group in New York, are separately planning to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in agriculture, chiefly farmland, from sub-Saharan Africa to the English countryside.
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"It's going on big time," said Brad Cole, president of Cole Partners Asset Management in Chicago, which runs a fund of hedge funds focused on natural resources. "There is considerable interest in what we call 'owning structure' — like United States farmland, Argentine farmland, English farmland — wherever the profit picture is improving."
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These new bets by big investors could bolster food production at a time when the world needs more of it.
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The investors plan to consolidate small plots of land into more productive large ones, to introduce new technology and to provide capital to modernize and maintain grain elevators and fertilizer supply depots.
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But the long-term implications are less clear. Some traditional players in the farm economy, and others who study and shape agriculture policy, say they are concerned these newcomers will focus on profits above all else, and not share the industry's commitment to farming through good times and bad.
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"Farmland can be a bubble just like Florida real estate," said Jeffrey Hainline, president of Advance Trading, a 28-year-old commodity brokerage firm and consulting service in Bloomington, Ill. "The cycle of getting in and out would be very volatile and disruptive.".....
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