Whats this!!!! Farmland prices rise faster than some Manhattan and London apartments

Quote from Dr. Zhivodka:

I remember Jimmy Rodgers advocating farm/raw land years ago.

We still have much North and South Texas land at less than $100/acre basis with (producing) water and (producing) mineral rights....some for sale....some not yet.

Bids?

:D

Are you serious????

we have been looking at some 100+ acre lots in the lower midwest. The avg price has been $1k/acre.

I could easily disappear into the abyss for 100 an acre :D
 
<i>"There is a ton of land, were not running out of space in our lifetimes"</i>

Who owns that land? Do you realize how much is BLM and state / federal wilderness that can never be developed?

There has never been a time, not once in the history of this country where land prices have declined from normal ascent of value. That does not include brief periods of wild speculation on certain plots... I'm talking about buy & hold for a decade or three.

As for carrying costs, that depends. Standing timber takes cost out of the equation. Aerable land can be rented for agriculture... and rent in most places is going up considerably.

I don't deal with commercial plots, so cannot comment on that aspect.

Given a choice of buying raw land or Dow Jones stocks right now, I'd take the former every single time. There have been many decade blocks of time where stocks went nowhere or lower. Raw land has never gone backwards in value over any measurable period of time. Find a way to handle any carry costs, and it's 100% risk free.
 
<i>"We still have much North and South Texas land at less than $100/acre basis with (producing) water and (producing) mineral rights....some for sale....some not yet. Bids?"</i>

Yes... please email me austinp44@yahoo.com with details. Thank you!
 
Im my case taxes and maintenance are jack-squat compared to the income/appreciation.

Though, at this point I'm not sure I'd be a buyer unless of course one had a plan to improve the land beyond the passive income/appreciation that it produces. And in most cases the grazing/farming and Oil/Natty Gas rights are at the WAY upper end of the historical range anyway.


Quote from dandxg:

I am under the belief that the downside to raw land has always been owing something you have to have pay taxes on which in most cases, doesn't provide an ROI. This thread does make me look at raw land differently. :)
 
BASIS....On the books at 100 per. Not for sale for. South Texas scrub brush w/rights is 4-5K per.




Quote from giles117:

Are you serious????

we have been looking at some 100+ acre lots in the lower midwest. The avg price has been $1k/acre.

I could easily disappear into the abyss for 100 an acre :D
 
Plenty of those.

Wild Turkey, Peacocks, Quail, Ducks, Geese, Rattlesnakes, and some ProngHorn too.

:D

Quote from austinp:

Heck with the leases... I want ST whitetails, wild hogs and bass ponds!
 
There was never a farm crisis till Carter. He set the American farmer back 30 years with 15% rates and the grain embargo. They are just now getting back to reasonable roi. Smoke that Willie Nelson!!!
 
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