JohnnyDoe said:
Central America and humid Caribbean islands are good locations. Volcanic soil is incredible.
Local authorities are usually helpful or at least not unfriendly towards agriculture business.
You need to educate locals about modern sustainable farming practices and at the same time learn from their experience and traditions. If you integrate both in your activity it can be profitable and fun.
It's also a good way to make friends and give back to the community as you might have to build accommodation and infrastructure.
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hannesur said:
Depends what you want it for. If for generating income from farming, then the market has set it - ROI / ROA will be pretty much the same and chances are slim that any individual will be any wiser.
Islands can be good but then the markets will be far, etc...
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I mean that where the (farm)land can genereate more income (from farming), its price is also higher. So the yield (ROI or ROA) will be pretty much the same everywhere.travelES said:
I would prefer it had the option of generating income. What do you mean by "the market has set it - ROI / ROA will be pretty much the same and chances are slim that any individual will be any wiser."?
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Most valuable crops are the ones that usually are ont only unscalable but also looked upon unfavourably by the authorities. 😉JohnnyDoe said:
On tropical islands you can have a 20% ROI on the most valuable crops. However, that's a hardly scalable business.
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W Fish said:
I mean that where the (farm)land can genereate more income (from farming), its price is also higher. So the yield (ROI or ROA) will be pretty much the same everywhere.
The yield will be even worse in places where living conditions are good. In NZ the hobby farmers (guys who pay for the lifestyle) sector is booming.
cheers,
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I would probably buy where I lived or wanted to live/farm.travelES said:
Where would you buy farmland if inclined? Im leaning towards Panama or the USA (now Trump won)
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Look into India(or other low tax jurisdictions):travelES said:
Where would you buy farmland if inclined? Im leaning towards Panama or the USA (now Trump won)
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That's definitely a requirement. But it applies to every investment: you must know what you are buying with your money.
I saw farms being sold the next day they came on the market. It's not the stock market though, so a farm can't be defined as a liquid investment.Frankie said:
Do you think you will receive a premium for the iliquidity of your investment?
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Like in every sector, there can be good and bad investments, you must pick the right one and be able to make it thrive.
This would require a long discussion, anyway quite often immigrants work (and do it well) in farms.
It's not so easy to steal, and you won't get broke if they est some bananas.Frankie said:
and not steal from you (unless you intend on plowing the fields yourself).
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When it's too good to be true”¦Frankie said:
Lots of scams promising high yields on Nut farms in Latin America/Durian farms in Malaysia/etc/etc/etc have duped countless Doomers to invest and never see their money back.
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Absolutely. You need to study and test your skills on a small scale before making any serious investment.Frankie said:
Please do very deep due diligence before you waste your money on this.
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They must be suckers. If you do basic things right you are expected to achieve market performance, like in every sector.Frankie said:
The people I have seen who have done it have all underperformed the market significantly
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