That was a good watch.
Caught myself tearing up a couple times.
Think about that. Say a farm is thumping along at a 10% ROI… which is really good …. Say it’s 50% paid for…. @ 20% interest you are broke.I watched a lot of that when it aired. Learned quite a little. I've heard of 21% intrest rates but dang that would hurt!
bingo!!!! When 99% of people think back on real estate - it’s the Rosie memories! “I shoulda bought more”. Most purge the downtimes out of their minds. Heck, 2008-2010…. Dudes couldn’t sell farms. I Personally know at least a dozen guys that went bankrupt playing the land game. Was a great time to buy. That was just 15 years ago. Maybe 1 buyer for every 5 farms people wanted to sell. There’s mini versions of the same thing even after that…. 2012-2013 grain spiked high!!! Then dropped in half in like ‘14 or ‘15. ‘15-‘19 …. Could buy tillable around me for half of what it was bringing. & we did buy some. No one wanted to buy (in reality, just very few wanted to buy & offered really low prices).This topic is always interesting to me. Im really conflicted on it. It was terrible for a lot of guys, but that's when my family really got their start farming. My grandpa started from nothing in the 60's. He sold the family car to buy a tractor to start farming. He bought where our home farm is in the late 60's. My family expanded their land base in the 80s and 90s when guys were afraid to buy. Dad bought a lot of land that cash flowed right from the start. His banker talked him out of buying several other pieces of land that he should have bought but it's easy to say that after the fact. My dad owns a short 1200 acres of land all within 4 miles of home. Without the crash, there is no way we own anywhere near that much land today and I probably wouldn't be farming today. So even in a crisis there was tremendous opportunity for some.