Funds swoop on farmland as commodities boom
By Santosh Menon and Jane Merriman
LONDON (Reuters) - Investment bankers often aspire to be gentlemen farmers, but now farming could soon become their day job.
Soaring agricultural prices, growing demand for biofuels and the growth of the Chinese and Indian economies are leading top global investment banks to buy farmland in a bid to embrace the physical commodities market.
Investment banks and hedge funds are mopping up vast tracts of agricultural land around the world, hoping to ride the so-called "commodities supercycle" that has lifted prices of everyday agricultural commodities such as wheat, rice, soybeans and corn to record highs.
U.S. investment bank Morgan Stanley (MS.N) has bought several thousand hectares of land in Ukraine, Europe's grain basin.
Morgan Stanley declined to comment, but industry executives say many other big banks are looking at land.
Barclays Capital, the investment bank arm of Barclays (BARC.L), is actively searching.
"We are looking at a lot of opportunities in those sort of things. We are looking across the board. We certainly wouldn't rule it out," said Roger Jones, co-head of commodities at Barclays Capital.
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