These people aren't daft. With headlines warning of food riots due to the recent droughts in the States and the big trends in terms of population, rising energy costs and the rising affluence of the Asian consumer it is clear that farmland will be a important part of a rich person's portfolio in the coming decades. As it has historically always been.Jim Slater, a notorious asset-stripper from the Seventies, is growing genetically modified maize on Brazilian prairie once owned by the father of racing driver Ayrton Senna. City ‘superwoman’ Nicola Horlick is investing the pension funds of Hampshire and Merseyside councils in Brazilian farmland.
Meanwhile, feted bond trader Guy Hands bought cattle stations three times bigger than Wales from the estate of the legendary TV mogul Kerry Packer. And Joe Lewis, the owner of Tottenham Hotspur, has invested a chunk of the fortune he made betting against sterling two decades ago to buy a slab of scenic Patagonia.
Then there is Phil Edmonds, England’s wily Test bowler of the Eighties whom Wisden praised for his ‘aristocratic manner’. Maybe that manner helped him persuade the government of Mozambique to let him have 75,000 acres for growing sugar cane.
But some villagers claimed the land was used without their consent. When the scheme went belly-up, he bounced back with a beef ranch on an area recently cleared of land mines. Will the master of spin prove a better cow-puncher than sugar baron?
Investors say farmland is the new big thing because the world is running short of food. They insist their efforts will be good for Africa, too, because they bring much-needed investment.
What is less clear is whether these investors have thought through the geo-political risks in investing in these parts of the world. If you do want to invest in land, I would suggest sticking to more 'traditional' places with a strong tradition of political stability and property rights.