Further to a thread posted earlier I got to thinking about land as purely an investment. Land always looks cheap historically compared to now. Small sums invested buying acres years ago look pretty good now - but will this trend continue?
In my own experience we sold one farm in Europe for the equivilent of $2000 an acre that had cost my Dad $90 an acre 35 years before. These look like huge gains but in reality equate to a compounded interest rate of a little over 7%. Not a bad return but one that could probably be bettered quite easily in other investment sectors especially when you factor in the lack of liquidity of farmland as a saleable asset.
If I were to buy land at $1500 an acre today it would need to grow in value to $16,000 an acre in 35 years time to attain the same 7% compounded interest - is that likely outside urban fringe areas? Can anyone tell me they think farmland on the Prairies will be worth that much in 35 years time?
In my own experience we sold one farm in Europe for the equivilent of $2000 an acre that had cost my Dad $90 an acre 35 years before. These look like huge gains but in reality equate to a compounded interest rate of a little over 7%. Not a bad return but one that could probably be bettered quite easily in other investment sectors especially when you factor in the lack of liquidity of farmland as a saleable asset.
If I were to buy land at $1500 an acre today it would need to grow in value to $16,000 an acre in 35 years time to attain the same 7% compounded interest - is that likely outside urban fringe areas? Can anyone tell me they think farmland on the Prairies will be worth that much in 35 years time?
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