Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Fifty Shades of Ag Investing

Agriculture as an asset class has gained major traction with investors of shapes and sizes in the last few years. Institutional investors’ allocations to agriculture are expected to grow from 1% of portfolios to 5% in the next five years according to industry estimates. That increase in investment is sorely needed. According to UN estimates, by 2030, the world will need at least 50% more food, 45% more energy and 30% more water. In short, the population of the planet is growing faster than its food and water supply. To learn more about the coming shortage click here.

Agriculture
(Photo: thegreenpages)
The metrics alone are cause for urgency, and our research shows that investors are paying attention. But with so many entry points into agriculture investing, investors are still forming their strategies.

Many institutional investor players have entered the game with farmland investments, although some are turned off by lofty valuations in the U.S. or lagging yields abroad. Others are pondering agribusiness private equity plays, both domestic and in emerging markets poised for growth.

The research is clear – there is an abundance of investment opportunities in ag across the food chain, from inputs to row crops; farms or packaged goods; grain elevators or disruptive technologies. In a relatively untested industry, investors are hungry for tried-and-true agriculture investing strategies.

Our AgReturn series, which released its agenda this week, gives investors the inside scoop on the myriad opportunities in agriculture, including commodities, farmland, biotech, crop protection and many others. This is a comprehensive view of an overwhelming space that highlights true success stories in an industry some have worried is the new cleantech.

This year’s AgReturn speakers have accomplished a lot in ag recently. They’ve debuted the hottest non-Facebook IPO of the year; sold portfolio companies to major corporate agribusinesses; or set the stage for governmental agriculture policy.

It’s a feast for investors who are hungry for opportunity. Click here to see a bit more about the November program.


2 comments:

Peter Thompson said...

Would have to respectfully disagree with the "lagging yields abroad" comment. It all depends on where you look! In Africa, there are farmland investments that target returns of 12 - 15%, whilst in Australia one can obtain 8 - 10% yields. Just depends on where you look!
farmland investment

Diana Middleton said...

Peter, thanks for the comment! I'm producing the AgReturn Global Investments conference this fall -- Farmland yields are top-of-mind for many investors. Did you take a look at a recent Q&A we did on this very topic? http://goo.gl/zbaEe

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