Friday, December 13, 2013
On 1:16 AM by Shambani Solutions No comments
That pearl of advice is from Jim Rogers, the
Demopolis, Ala., native who began his business career selling peanuts at age 5,
and went on to become a billionaire as a founding partner with legendary
financier George Soros in Quantum Fund, one of the most successful
international funds ever, which racked up a 4,200 percent gain over 10 years.
“Over the next few years, I think
agricultural projects are going to be one of the best investments and
agriculture is going to be one of the best industries in the world,” he said in
a recent interview on Bloomberg/UTV.
Rogers, who attended Yale and Oxford
Universities, and recalls that when he went to Wall Street at the invitation of
a friend, “I didn’t know the difference between a stock and a bond,” retired at
the ripe old age of 37. He then spent a couple of years traveling around the
world on a custom-built motorcycle, visiting 116 countries and setting a
Guinness world record, and scouting out new investment opportunities.
Two of his favorite maxims are: “Get out of
the dollar, teach your children Chinese, and buy as many commodities as you
can,” and “They wouldn’t be politicians if they knew what they were doing.”
Still considered one of the most astute
investment analysts around, Rogers speaks and lectures widely and turns up on
the TV business channels frequently. He usually doesn’t miss an opportunity to
get in a plug for agriculture.
“We’re going to have much, much higher prices
over the next few years,” he said in a CNBC interview, noting that prices for
agricultural commodities have been too low for too long.
“Anybody who’s got potentially good
agriculture land and good weather” stands to be a winner, Rogers says.
In another interview, he noted “the number of
acres devoted to wheat has been declining for 30 years and inventory levels of
food are the lowest since 1972.”
Corn and wheat are 60 percent below their
peak prices, he says, “and adjusted for inflation, they’re at only about 5
percent of their peak prices. God knows how high the price of agriculture is
going to go, so that’s where I’m putting more of my money now.”
While he remains bullish on gold and precious
metals, despite record prices, he avers, “I’m going to make more money in
agriculture than I make in precious metals.”
Rogers isn’t alone; a number of highly
respected investment analysts are keen on the future of agriculture.
Even the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book survey
of current economic conditions recently highlighted strength in U.S. agricultural
markets, citing continued expansion of demand for ag products, helped along by
shortages in overseas nations.
source: http://southwestfarmpress.com/management/billionaires-advice-invest-agriculture
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