Posted on 10/27/2010 3:05:43 PM PDT by blam
The 40-Year Food Outlook
By Addison Wiggin
10/27/10 Baltimore, Maryland The short-term (1-3 year) outlook for agricultural commodities is bullish enough. When you start looking out decades, the picture becomes one of an epic bull market.
Feast on the following highlights from an August report by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, working with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
* World population will grow 2.3 billion by 2050, to over 9 billion
* Nearly all this growth will come in developing countries
* This population growth will require a 70% increase in global food production
* In developing countries, production will need to nearly double
* Making this happen will require annual investment averaging $209 billion.
And if you break out the details, that $209 billion figure is just the private investment required if the percentage of the world that goes hungry stays static.
If hunger is to be eliminated in the next 15 years, that investment figure jumps to $359 billion.
Is it any wonder the FAO expects grain prices over the next 10 years to remain 15-40% above their levels of 1997-2006? Oh, and thats before you adjust for inflation over the next ten years.
So who stands to profit from that annual investment of $209 billion to boost crop production? Hint: It wont be food manufacturers. Theyre going to be hit hard. Instead, youll want to be investing in the suppliers of fertilizer and/or farm equipment.
Every month, the Institute for Supply Management releases its Chicago-region Purchasing Managers Index a gauge of manufacturing activity. The numbers are rarely as interesting as the comments from real businesspeople who respond to the survey.
In the survey released Sept. 30, one comment read: Look for consumer food prices to rise soon. Food manufacturers simply cannot continue to absorb commodity increases.
The market is just now waking up to this reality. On Oct. 8, when the Agriculture Department cut its forecast for the US corn crop, shares of Tyson, the chicken producer, dropped 6%. Smithfield, the pork giant, also took a hit. In contrast, seed giant Monsanto rose 3.5% and fertilizer maker CF Industries jumped 6%.
So again, who benefits from that $209 billion annual stream? Richard Feltes, an analyst at the RJ OBrien brokerage in Chicago, perhaps puts it best: Buy farm equipment stocks and sell food company stocks.
There arent many ETFs that focus on the kind of stocks that went up on this chart. But the Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (MOO) is one that does. MOOs top 10 holdings make up nearly 60% of the entire fund. No. 1 on the list, making up 8.5% of the holdings, is Deere & Co. the quintessential farm equipment stock. Nos. 2 and 3 are PotashCorp and Mosaic, the leading producers of fertilizer. Potash is the subject of a buyout battle right now, and its outcome is uncertain. Mosaic could well become a takeover target. So its a volatile, but also exciting, time for the sector.
MOO also gives you access to stocks you cant buy on US exchanges, like Wilmar Intl., an Asian agribusiness giant. Its the worlds largest producer of palm oil and the second-largest company ranked by market cap on the Singapore stock exchange. Its a simple call. Buy MOO and hold it. We dont know if youll be able to ride it all the way to when world population reaches 9 billion in 2050 but itll have staying power.
Farmland, itself, is another very compelling way to capitalize on the coming bull market in agricultural commodities. But buying farmland is, obviously, much more difficult than buying a share of stock.
Productive agricultural land with water on-site will be very valuable in the future, says Michael Burry, the hedge fund manager who bet against the housing bubble and the principal character in Michael Lewis best-selling book The Big Short. Ive put a good amount of money into that.
Farmland has had a remarkably consistent return. A farmland index compiled by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries has risen an average 11.2% annually since 1992. There hasnt been a single losing year. And only one losing quarter.
Within the United States, the average price of farm real estate has doubled over the last decade, to $2,140 an acre, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
Elsewhere in the world, the farmland rush is on. High-net-worth individuals like George Soros and Ted Turner are buying farmland in Argentina, for example. But the biggest buyers are the sovereign wealth funds of governments in countries where farmland is at a premium think China, India and the sandy Middle Eastern countries.
Theyre finding willing sellers in developing countries. Figures are hard to come by, but the World Bank estimates foreign investors of all stripes bought 111 million acres in the developing world in 2009 a 10-fold increase in 10 years. Two-thirds of those deals have been struck in Africa.
The iconic example is a deal that fell through. In 2008, South Koreas Daewoo Logistics signed a lease on farmland in Madagascar, the large island nation off Africas southeast coast. The company planned to plant corn on territory larger than the state of Connecticut.
Angry voters promptly ousted the government that leased the land. The new president revoked the lease, saying, Madagascars land is neither for sale nor for rent.
But Sudans is. Nearly 10 million acres of Sudanese farmland have been sold to foreign buyers between 2004-09. More than 6 million acres in Mozambique have also changed hands. Liberia, Ethiopia and Nigeria have likewise sold sizeable tracts.
For investors, its a high-risk proposition. Many of these governments are selling the land from underneath the peasants who tended it for generations and kicking them out. Theyre not very happy about that. If they cant get redress, they might well seek revenge. Even in countries where the rule of law and property rights has a stronger history, the rules can change in an instant. Brazil just passed a decree limiting acreage held by foreign-owned companies.
So the best opportunities for US investors may be close to home. But that presents a problem for just about anyone who doesnt know the farming business: How do you capitalize if you want to buy farmland, but you dont know a combine from a cultipacker?
Thats where a growing number of specialized funds are stepping in. Boston-based Hancock Agricultural Investment Group has 210,000 acres of holdings, almost all in the United States. Agcapita, a Calgary-based firm, has acquired more than 30,000 acres, mostly in Saskatchewan.
But beware You cant dabble in these funds the way you can a mutual fund or an ETF. The typical minimum investment is $25,000 and the typical minimum commitment is six years. Still, if you have the cash and the patience, farmland could provide the biggest payout of all as the agriculture sector booms over the next decade.
Were talking about long-term trends here. Growing populations. More affluent populations seeking a better diet. A world farm system stretched to the max. But make no mistake agriculture is volatile, and there will be shakeout periods.
How patient are you? When the grains and the ag stocks pull back, will you still believe in the long-term story strongly enough to hold on? I hope so, because the opportunity is enormous.
Oh, how many times have we told we are going to run out of this or that? It is always wrong. That said....I think investing in food production is a good investment.
And if we end the stupid ethanol program his stupid graph inverts. When you take food to make fuel to make food and insert a whopping amount of graft and payoff along the way; what could go wrong?
"Jason Simpkins, writes: Corn prices have surged more than 70% since May and could rise even higher in coming weeks. Prices will remain elevated for at least the next year, perhaps even testing their 2008 record high of $7.65 a bushel. That will likely mean higher food prices across the board for at least the next year."
Eh, well *gosh* I’d suppose there will be additional productive capacity created to mop up some of those higher grain prices?
If the federal government would eliminate all laws regarding agriculture and farming, notably farming limits, we could produce far more food than we currently do, and actually eat it instead of refining it for a gasoline additive.
Have non of these idiots heard of hydroponics?
I can just look down where my lap used to be and see the 40 year food outlook. Real funny, blam. ;’)
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