JD Vance Funded AcreTrader. Here's Why That Matters
JD Vance Funded AcreTrader. Heres Why That Matters.
The real estate platform streamlines investing in US farmland. Now farms are fast becoming a portfolio staple for investors worldwide.
By Grey MoranSeptember 18, 2024
Some of the most pristine farmland in California can be yours, at least by proxy, in just a matter of minutes. Thats the promise that AcreTrader, a company with the mission of simplifying investing in valuable U.S. farmland, makes to prospective financiers.
Its current offerings include 83 acres of almond trees in the San Joaquin Valley, advertised as an opportunity to invest in a water-secure almond orchard in the worlds most productive almond-producing region. This property also boasts of senior water rights on the Kings River, suggesting that the land will continue to turn a profit long into the futurea dream of farmers and investors alike.
AcreTrader is just one of many companies launched in the past decade that facilitate the sale of farmland, which has increasingly become a staple in investor portfolios. Recently, it was revealed that this includes the investment portfolio of vice presidential nominee JD Vance, the Republican senator from Ohio.
Vance invested up to $65,000 in private investments in AcreTrader during his stint as a venture capitalist, according to his 2022 financial disclosure to the Senate ethics committee. The investment firm Narya Capitalwhich Vance launched in 2020 with backing from PayPal co-founder Peter Thielwas a vehicle for these investments, and a key backer in early funding rounds of the farmland startup. And while Vance is no longer listed as a partner at Narya Capital, according to his 2023 financial disclosure, he appears to still be an investor in the firmor more technically, multiple legal entities with names including Narya.
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https://civileats.com/2024/09/18/jd-vance-invested-in-acretrader-heres-why-that-matters/
JD Vance still owns AcreTrader, an app that lets wealthyoften foreigninvestors buy up U.S. farmland. Is this possibly one of the reasons USAID was cut? To make way for more factory farms? I wouldn't be surprised.
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