PART A · THE MARKET

The market today and tomorrow.

A mature but structurally capped farmland asset class. An emerging regenerative asset class. A closing time window.

0
of global arable land is degraded
0
the typical net annual IRR of mature conventional farmland
0
the land discount on degraded land

Conventional farmland: a recognized asset class, but structurally limited.

For several decades, conventional farmland has been a recognized asset class by institutional investors. The investor acquires agricultural land, which they lease to a third-party operator via an agricultural lease. Their remuneration combines a fixed annual lease rent — a small portion of the farm's revenue — and a land capital gain captured upon exit, typically after fifteen to twenty years of ownership.

Performance is stable but limited. Mature institutional farmland funds typically show a net annual internal rate of return (IRR) between 2 and 4%. Current income is capped by the lease rent mechanism; land capital gain depends on the general appreciation of the land.

Three structural limitations that are intensifying
Limitation 01

Exposure to agricultural fluctuations

Operating profit depends on commodity prices, input costs, and climatic hazards. The investor bears operational volatility that they do not control.

Limitation 02

Progressive soil degradation

Intensive methods deplete organic matter, microbial biodiversity, and water retention capacity. The land's productive value declines over time.

Limitation 03

Increasing climate sensitivity

Droughts, floods, and unseasonal frosts are multiplying. Yields are becoming more volatile — a risk directly reflected in the annual distribution to investors.

A model that does not capture emerging co-benefits

Conventional farmland was conceived at a time when soil was considered a neutral production medium. However, the ecosystem services provided by soil — carbon storage, water regulation, biodiversity, climate resilience — are acquiring a monetizable value via voluntary carbon markets, payments for environmental services, and sector premiums. The conventional model, based solely on lease rent, captures none of these.

This lack of capture has become the factor that caps the asset class's performance. Major institutional farmland managers have, for several years, been deploying strategies for a gradual transition towards more sustainable practices and explicitly recognize the limitations of the conventional model.

An emerging approach structuring a new risk/return profile.

Regenerative agricultural investment refers to a set of strategies based on biological soil restoration, productive diversification, and vertical integration of the value chain. The land is held by a regulated vehicle that ensures long-term control; operations are entrusted to an integrated operator under a master lease, who manages agronomic practices according to a documented regenerative framework.

Three distinctive characteristics A new risk/return profile
Characteristic 01

Structural climate resilience

Diversification of production, restoration of organic matter, and agroforestry increase water absorption capacity and stabilize yields in the face of hazards.

Characteristic 02

Progressive land value appreciation

Regenerated soils gain fertility and intrinsic value — an appreciation measured by independent protocols such as the Savory Institute's Ecological Outcome Verification.

Characteristic 03

Net Zero alignment and certified monitoring

Integration into the ESG, SFDR, and TNFD frameworks adopted by institutional investors makes the asset class eligible for impact and sustainability mandates that are regularly audited.

An asset class still in structuring

The market remains young: the first dedicated funds emerged in the mid-2010s. Their size remains modest compared to conventional farmland, but their growth is rapid. No player has yet structured a fully integrated model covering simultaneously land ownership, agronomic operations, the value chain, co-benefit measurement, and applied research.

For an institutional investor, this emerging phase allows access to the asset class before capital flows compress returns, and supports the emergence of structuring players.

An opportunity available today, which will close within the decade.

Four converging dynamics define the current window. Three describe an available opportunity — land degradation and the discount it creates, agricultural generational renewal, institutional Net Zero alignment. The fourth describes the pressure that will close this opportunity: climate urgency, which will make resilient areas strategic and tighten acquisition conditions within five to ten years.

Four converging dynamics 3 Opportunities · 1 Pressure
Opportunity

Degradation and land discount

75% of global land is degraded (FAO), creating an acquisition discount of 30 to 60%. This is what makes regeneration economically investable.

Opportunity

Generational renewal

70% of farmers in major exporting countries are over 55. A window of access to farmland opened by succession — which will close with conventional concentration.

Opportunity

Institutional Net Zero alignment

Institutional mandates align with ESG, SFDR, and TNFD frameworks. The regulatory context supports the regenerative asset class.

Pressure

Climate urgency — 5 to 10 years

Climate pressure will make resilient areas strategic. Acquisition conditions will tighten, prices will rise. This is what closes the window.