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Why Has Bill Gates Spent $113 Million on Nebraska Farmland?

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In 2017, the Canadian board made the decision to sell a significant portion of its American farmland portfolio, which amounted to half a billion dollars and included all 22,830 acres of its land in Nebraska. The purchaser and financial details of these seemingly ordinary Nebraska farms remained undisclosed until recently, it has now been revealed that the individual behind this purchase is none other than Bill Gates and over the past six years, Gates has has invested more than $113 million in purchasing farmland in Nebraska.

Gates’ ownership of farmland is structured through over 20 shell companies located across the country. Some of these entities trace back to a P.O. Box in Kirkland, Washington, where Cascade Asset Management, responsible for managing all of Gates’ investments, is headquartered. Bill Gates’ Nebraska neighbors don’t know he owns the soybean field down the road. 

Here’s the story of his spending spree, including the massive loan he took out against his land by Destiny Herbers of Flatwater Press.

Spilling Bill’s beans: Tech billionaire spent $113 million on Nebraska farmland.

A glance at federal records shows the series of Nebraska farms listed as foreign owned, though there’s no country attached and no hint that these farms with unassuming names might be related. Willowdale Farms, Merrick County Farms, Dove Haven Ranch, Champion Valley Farm, Schroder Family Farms and many more are concentrated in northeast Nebraska but spread to the southeast corner and west nearly to Wyoming.

In Nebraska’s business records, they have one similarity: Each farm’s office address leads to a single-story brick building in the St. Louis suburbs, an office park housing a dentist, lawyers and, until recently, a farmland investment startup called AgCoA.

For years, AgCoA was owned by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, a government-owned group managing the retirement funds of 21 million Canadians. 

But in 2017, the Canadian board decided to offload a half-billion dollar chunk of its American farmland portfolio – including all 22,830 acres of its Nebraska land. 

The buyer of those unassuming-sounding Nebraska farms wasn’t publicly listed. Until now, the financial details of the transaction and the gargantuan loan he’s taken out against it have remained publicly unknown.

The buyer’s name: Bill Gates.

Tangled Web of Gates

The billionaire who co-founded Microsoft has, in the past six years, spent more than $113 million buying Nebraska farmland. The Flatwater Free Press analyzed five years of land sales data, between 2018 and 2022, originally gathered by a University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Journalism and Mass Communications data journalism class.

If that data would have included the year 2017 – when Mt. Edna Farms, the Gates-owned company that made that massive purchase from the Canadian pension board – then Gates would have been the top buyer of Nebraska ag land by money spent. Since 2017, he has spent more than double the second-place buyer. 

Gates’ farmland is held by more than 20 shell companies spread across the country. Some lead back to a P.O. Box in Kirkland, Washington, the city where Cascade Asset Management, which manages all Gates’ investments, is headquartered.

 Click screen below to view NBC video.

Others are linked to Lenexa, Kansas, and Monterey, Louisiana, population 371, where reporters have previously traced Gates’ operations.

These limited liability companies, buried under layers of business names, overlapping employees and addresses in at least three states, form a network more tangled and opaque than the one created by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is buying a giant amount of Nebraska ranch land. 

Because it’s hidden, Nebraskans living and farming in communities where Gates is among the largest landowners are often unaware that one of the world’s richest men owns the cornfield down the road.   

Gates now owns around 20,000 acres of farmland across 19 counties in Nebraska after selling some land in recent years. He owns the largest chunk of land, about 8,500 acres, in Holt County.

Click here to view the interactive map

“I think if you ask on the street, who owns Mt. Edna Farms, nobody’d even know what it was,” said Bill Tielke, chair of the Holt County board. “So it’s not like people realize that he does own that much land in Holt County.”

Mt. Edna has a farm manager in Holt County, Tielke said, and local people work for the farm and rent the ground. Tielke has worked as a crop adjuster for local farmers who rented Mt. Edna’s land, and said that if they hadn’t told Tielke that Gates bought the land, he wouldn’t have known. 

“I don’t remember it throwing up any bells or whistles or anybody even saying anything about it,” Tielke said.

The Nebraska Farm Bureau, through spokesperson Cassie Hoebelheinrich, declined to comment on Gates’ farmland ownership. 

“This is an issue we really don’t follow and isn’t a priority for us,” Hoebelheinrich said in an email.

Gates’ land ownership has been the source of much rumor, and some concern, in Nebraska, partly because of his connections to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which runs programs addressing issues of global public health, sustainability and climate change.

If Gates’ land was given to a nonprofit – potentially making it exempt from property taxes –  it would “decimate” the counties involved, State Sen. Tom Brewer, a Republican whose district covers 11 rural counties in central and northern Nebraska, said in an email.

“It would force action from the Legislature to protect the counties,” Brewer wrote.

But the farmland is one of Bill Gates’ financial investments, said the company who manages those investments, not part of the Gates Foundation’s portfolio.  

“The investments that Cascade makes in Nebraska farmland are not connected with the agricultural or climate initiatives of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,” a Cascade spokesperson said in an email.

Cascade Asset Management declined to answer further questions about its Nebraska farmland purchases and the structure of the affiliated LLCs. 

Gates himself recently publicly reinforced the idea that his farmland purchases are investments. 

“The decision to buy this land was made by people who help manage my money so that we get a good return, so that the Foundation can buy more vaccines,” Gates said on a November episode of Trevor Noah’s podcast. “And they saw that if we could invest in land and (improve) the productivity of that land, that it would have a good return.”

Buy, Borrow, Die

Gates doesn’t simply receive rent checks from his Nebraska farmland. He’s also using it to borrow staggering sums of money. 

Three days before Christmas 2021, Mr. Edna Farms filed paperwork with Dawson County, clearing the path to use a part of Gates’ land as collateral. 

Gates’ LLC then took out two loans against his Nebraska farmland.

The total of those loans: $700 million.

The obvious question: Why is Gates, who Forbes deemed the world’s richest man 18 different times between 1995 and 2017, using Nebraska farmland to take out a $700 million loan?

Using IRS data, the news outlet ProPublica estimated Gates’ total average annual income between 2013 and 2018 was $2.85 billion, with an average federal income tax rate of 18.4%. That income primarily came from sales of Microsoft stock, which is taxable.

But extremely high net-worth individuals like Gates often use a strategy of borrowing against their assets – like land – if they want spendable money. Selling those same assets would generate taxable income, said Adam Thimmesch, a University of Nebraska College of Law professor specializing in business and tax law. 

“If you can hold those assets until you die, all of that taxable gain goes away, so the ideal tax planning technique, if you’re wealthy enough to be able to do it, is to invest in those appreciating assets,” Thimmesch said.

If certain conditions are met, tax law then allows someone to inherit the land and avoid paying taxes on the long-term appreciated value if they sell it, Thimmesch said. 

In the meantime, ultra-rich Americans can borrow against their assets to fund their lifestyles or make other investments. Banks are happy to lend money for something like farmland, the law professor said, because there’s security in the value.

“Then on your death, your heirs can sell the property if they need to, to pay back the debt, and there’s just no tax liability anymore,” Thimmesch said. “So you can eliminate that entire layer of tax, while still kind of enjoying the benefits of being wealthy while you’re alive.”

In order to use this so-called “buy-borrow-die” method, Gates would need to place his Nebraska farmland in his own name before he dies, or be the sole owner of Mt. Edna Farms LLC.

The corporate structure and official ownership of Gates’ various shell companies has never been publicly explained. It’s impossible to know now if his land would be eligible for the tax provision, Thimmesch said. 

Cascade Investment declined to answer questions about the loan, and the management of Gates’ investments beyond confirming that they are not connected to the activities of the Gates Foundation.

Below the Surface

Gates’ land ownership in Nebraska includes the valuable water beneath that land.

He has access through 191 existing wells, which add to the value of the land for farmers and investors alike by providing crop irrigation. 

A center pivot near Gates’ land in Antelope County, Nebraska. The billionaire owns land in 19 Nebraska counties. Photo by Jerry L Mennenga for the Flatwater Free Press

Gaining access to groundwater is often a priority for potential farmland buyers. If you own land in Nebraska, you have the possibility of accessing the underlying groundwater, but natural resource districts regulate how water is used.

“I’m sure that the NRD is well aware (of Gates), and that every one of those wells is no doubt permitted, and has associated certified acres and probably does some annual reporting to the NRD as well,” said Don Blankenau, a lawyer who provides water-related legal counsel to Nebraska NRDs.

Gates’ existing wells were transferred to Mt. Edna with the lump sum purchase of land in 2017, public records from the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources show.

“We don’t treat Bill Gates any different than Dean Edson or anybody else. They can have that land, but they don’t own the water,” said Dean Edson, director of the Nebraska Association of Resource Districts. “If they want to use the water, Bill Gates is gonna have to come get a permit.”

If you buy land in Nebraska without a well, there’s no guarantee your local NRD will grant a permit to dig one. But if the land already has a well, the NRD has likely already certified its use. The landowner, be it Bill Gates or Bill Jones, can continue to use that water so long as the use follows existing rules, Blankenau said.

“I’ve heard over the decades I’ve done this, people are always concerned that somebody’s gonna go out and buy a big tract of land in the Sandhills, and then transport that water away,” Blankenau said.

That’s nearly impossible, he said, because Nebraska has tight limitations on the transportation of groundwater, especially outside of state borders or as a commodity. An investor like Gates moving large quantities of groundwater via pipeline or trucking operation would attract the attention of neighbors and the local NRD.

“If you extract groundwater out of the ground, carbonate it and add sugar to it, you’ve got soda pop, and you can move that all over the place. Same thing with beer, one of my law partners started brewing, and I always tease him that he’s exporting groundwater in the form of beer,” Blankenau said.

In Holt County, Gates’ operation has gone mostly unnoticed by neighbors and county officials. And the actual farming of that land has barely changed. 

But Gates’ land buys still matter, said Tielke, chair of the Holt County board. The purchases of any large outside investor limit the opportunities of small farmers to break into the industry. 

“I think it’s going to cause a lot of problems for future generations to get young people started,” Tielke said. “It’s getting pretty hard to compete with these guys that are coming here buying this land now.”

Source – Destiny Herbers –  Flatwater Free Press and Flatwater Free Press reporter Yanqi Xu contributed to the data analysis used in this story.

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john
john
3 months ago

In America, ONLY an American can own land. Man or woman standing on the Land and Soil jurisdiction. U.S. citizens and citizens of the UNITED STATES, cannot own Land in America. Period.
Title deeds are nothing more than a description on paper of a piece of land.
At best, psycho Gates paid 113 million for pieces of paper.

CharlieSeattle
CharlieSeattle
Reply to  john
3 months ago

Kinda/sorta, after the French, Spanish, English genocide and finally American Manifest Destiny disposed the indigenous native populations in South, Central and North America of their land!

The CCP, globalists and even drug cartels can use an American shell company to buy property anywhere their bribes will allow.

john
john
Reply to  CharlieSeattle
3 months ago

Incorrect. Go and do your homework. Spouted garbage otherwise.

Rich
Rich
3 months ago

The billionaire who co-founded Microsoft has more money than God. He can spend his money on anything he likes. Bill Gates likes owning land and farmland is cheaper than housing land, so why not – what else has he got to spend his money on? At days end, his days are numbered when he eventually dies (hooray) and he gets to go back over the other side where his exploits in this life will be rewarded, or punished in Hell, where for my money, he deserves to be and for eternity, after the virus he probably had released on us all, directly or indirectly and Biden has not explained what Bill Gates gets $7.5B donation from American taxpayers during pandemic – for (releasing the virus after his Event 201, about 2 weeks later?)
With a net worth of $126 billion, Gates doesn’t fit the profile of a middle-class folk. (Plus the 400 Million he got when he sold his purchase price 50 million Pfizer shares)
Take $113 million on Nebraska farmland.out of the above and $113 million is just small change and expenditure not even noticed, I would have thought.It is all relative – we go buy a newspaper – Bill goes buy some land, the only thing different is the cost

Sergio
Sergio
3 months ago

Whatever this psychopathic scarecrow is going to be doing with these lands, one thing is for sure. It will not be good for humanity.

Yo Bloood
Yo Bloood
Reply to  Sergio
3 months ago

Law of average he will only get away with it for so long, then he’ll be sent straight to where he belongs

Jackie
Jackie
3 months ago

New laws 2024 for shell companies like all the LLC with business name. It’s designed to help hide things from public and taxes. Many are using these LLC titles BEWARE

Jane
Jane
3 months ago

He needs stopped.

Rnndy J
Rnndy J
3 months ago

Enticing article but toooo long, many minutes grinding through, down and down. Whiplash from super scrolling threatens well-being.

trackback
3 months ago

[…] Why Has Bill Gates Spent $113 Million on Nebraska Farmland?  In 2017, the Canadian board made the decision to sell a significant portion of its American farmland portfolio, which amounted to half a billion dollars and included all 22,830 acres of its land in Nebraska. The purchaser and financial details of these seemingly ordinary Nebraska farms remained undisclosed until recently; it has now been revealed that the individual behind this purchase is none other than Bill Gates, and over the past six years, Gates has invested more than $113 million in purchasing farmland in Nebraska. […]

brinsleyjenkins
brinsleyjenkins
3 months ago

I want this man to stand trial for his crimes against humanity.

john
john
Reply to  brinsleyjenkins
3 months ago
trackback
3 months ago

[…] Why Has Bill Gates Spent $113 Million on Nebraska Farmland? In 2017, the Canadian board made the decision to sell a significant portion of its American farmland portfolio, which amounted to half a billion dollars and included all 22,830 acres of its land in Nebraska. The purchaser and financial details of these seemingly ordinary Nebraska farms remained undisclosed until recently; it has now been revealed that the individual behind this purchase is none other than Bill Gates, and over the past six years, Gates has invested more than $113 million in purchasing farmland in Nebraska. […]

Janet Cutts
Janet Cutts
3 months ago

Poisoning the water was my first thoughts

Jane
Jane
3 months ago

Seriously, when does the world free itself of Billionaires? I thought this guy was giving all his wealth to humanity? He’s a clown, and a danger to all of humanity. Self focussed and cannot cease gathering, and sees his gathering as though it entitles him to reorder all of life (including depopulate as in the Good club). I don’t like to hate, but I hate this man. With every cell in my body. I cannot bring myself to forgive him, nor his likes. He’s a joke of monumental proportions, everything wrong in humanity flies out from his geekish stupid grin. This world will soon not be worth living on, for anyone other than the rich club, and this piece of human excrement (along with others I could name, your h……ess, and others), will be the prime reason why. We are asleep, and these morons are hacking at our lives bit by bit. Where does it end? If him and his likes are not stopped. It ends for us all.

raj patel
raj patel
Reply to  Jane
3 months ago

Agree 100%.

Jason
Jason
3 months ago

Nebraska is not in Canada. It’s in the USA. I cannot read an article that begins with such an error that Canada has sold Nebraska farmland.

Richadio
Richadio
Reply to  Jason
3 months ago

Canada sold off a portion of its investments that included that land. The land was used as income in pension plans.

Ivan Yakov
Ivan Yakov
3 months ago

One answer–special use valuation.

aClue
aClue
3 months ago

Why would an inbred billionaire want to buy land in the middle of nowhere? maybe he has insight into the Future map of America that will soon make that land worth far more than it is now, after the second american revolution happens.

Maybe he knows what land will be hit by enemy nukes and is buying up what will be left untargetted so he can RAPE Americans bank accounts After the event to retain his wealth and power?

Lots of What Ifs.

trackback
3 months ago

[…] by Rhoda Wilson, Expose News: […]

CharlieSeattle
CharlieSeattle
3 months ago

Now, Now!! Gates and the CCP bribed Congress and the DOJ first to get permission!

trackback
3 months ago

[…] Read More: Why Has Bill Gates Spent $113 Million on Nebraska Farmland? […]

trackback
3 months ago

[…] Read More: Why Has Bill Gates Spent $113 Million on Nebraska Farmland? […]

Richadio
Richadio
3 months ago

Wonder what would happen to that investment value if farmers ceased to lease that portion of land from the leasee?

Yo Bloood
Yo Bloood
3 months ago

Why! Because he’s a evil piece of shite he’s a demon

Kevin61
Kevin61
3 months ago

This ugly,genocidal,maniac that thinks he has the right to kill people needs be planted in the dirt of one of his farms!
Maybe have him fall off a big John Deere and into the blades of a big plow!…..Nah, him actually farm?….Work?..he hasn’t worked a day in his ugly life!….except for flappin his arms around while pushing his vaccines, patches and eugenics. This p.o.s needs a rope or a bullet!

trackback
3 months ago

[…] kauft Bill Gates unter dem Deckmantel von Briefkastenfirmen immer mehr Landwirtschaftsflächen auf (siehe Artikel von expose-news) und ist inzwischen der größte private Ackerlandbesitzer der USA. Wieviel ukrainischer Boden seit […]