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Thursday, September 2, 2010

85 Years of Service

Entry September 2, 2010

We want to share remembrances of the 85 years of United Country,
formerly United Farm Agency. We share these memories from
our home office from their Blog entries.

Celebrating milestone sales
the United way

by ucrealestate on August 27, 2010

United’s founder, Roscoe Chamberlain, had a generous spirit that was recorded in many stories in the company’s record books. One story, however, was so monumental that it caused a national media frenzy.

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Chamberlain was so proud of United Farm Agency’s accomplishments and so full of gratitude to the many loyal customers who contributed to the company success that he eagerly awaited the company’s 50,000th sale milestone and spent years planning for the event.

That milestone was reached in November 1955 when Bob and Aleene Sells and their seven children received their new 80-acre farm in southeast Missouri for free as a gift from United Farm Agency.

Cheryl Jacks, a 48-year employee of United, and the only current employee with the pleasure of meeting Mr. Chamberlain in person, shares the story of the 50,000th sale in the video below.


The company continued Chamberlain’s tradition for many more years by celebrating major milestones along with way.

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In 1965, the company reached its 100,000th sale. After years of flipping through United Farm Agency catalogs, Col. G. E. Brown, U.S. Army, and Maj. H.A. Mott, U.S. Army, purchased a 150-acre tract in Athens, Texas. The gentlemen had plans to improve the property and were thrilled when they learned that United Farm Agency would be paying the entire cost of a full carpet of Bermuda grass for the land, to celebrate the company’s milestone.

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United’s 200,000th sale was recorded in October 1974 when the company presented a brand new Ford Country Squire to Mary Alice Lawson and Elizabeth Kenney to put to use for their business, Humpty Dumpty Nursery School.

Four years later, in 1978, the company celebrated the 250,000th sale by treating Ray and Brenda Hamilton, who had purchased a 160-acre dairy farm in Lebanon, Mo., to a property makeover complete with the painting of the home and all outbuildings, tilling of the fields,
and the use of an express moving van service, compliments of United Farm Agency.


Help us celebrate 85 years of service by calling us to help you find your perfect property in North East Texas!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Retirement Land Investment

HTML clipboardYou Can Invest in Land with a
Self Directed Retirement Account HTML clipboard

You can invest in Land, improved or unimproved with aYou Can Invest in Land with a Self Directed Retirement Account “Self Directed Retirement Plans” since the IRS has allowed them. No one wants to talk about it. “They”, the investment firms do not make money on a Land transaction because “they” are not licensed real estate agents. Only licensed real estate companies can take commissions and are not allowed to pay referrals except to other active real estate firms. The traditional investment community has had control of over 97% percent of the retirement accounts and they have been making a great living off your hard earned money.
Your stock broker or financial advisor will not advise you how to take money away from their pockets and invest in real estate through your IRA, or 401K plan either. The financial magazines run large ads for brokerage firms and mutual funds T.V. and radio investment shows are supported by the same Wall Street advertising dollars…your money. I would be curious to see how many investment magazines will publish this article or if any investment shows will address this topic.
Stated on the IRS website “…..because of “administrative burdens”, many IRA trustees do not allow IRA owners to invest IRA funds in Real Estate. IRA law does not prohibit investing in Real Estate but trustees are not required to offer Real Estate as an option.” No commission for real estate sales may have a say here described as “administrative burdens”.
An Individual Retirement Account is a personal savings plan that allows you to set aside funds for your retirement. Investments made within these plans grow in either a tax-deferred or tax-free environment.
The IRS allows your IRA to earn tax free or tax deferred income with NO limitations on how much you receive—you can earn thousands of dollars with no tax consequences. A “Self-directed IRA” will allow you to choose your own investment strategies to earn significantly more for your retirement.
The term ‘self-directed’ does not actually have any legal connotation. It does not imply a different type of IRA, or a separate set of IRS rules. ‘Self-directed’ is simply an accepted industry term indicating that the IRA custodian is allowing the IRA owner greater control over their investment decisions. When an IRA account is self-directed, the IRA owner makes all of their investment decisions and instructs the custodian to act. You must have a custodian as a third party administrator.
Be careful who you choose as your custodian. Most of these “professionals” are part of the same old 97% controlling crowd previously mentioned. Our recommendation is that you find one that charges an administration fee and believes in Land Investments.
Traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, Roth IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s, Coverdell Education Savings (ESA) a.k.a. Educational IRAs, Qualified Annuities, Profit Sharing Plans, Money Purchase Plans, Government Eligible Deferred Compensation Plans, Keoghs are qualified plans that can be converted into “Self-directed Retirement Plans”. For more detailed information visit the Internal Revenue Service’s website. Also see Publication 590. On pages 40-41 you will see what investments are not allowed. Land is not included and therefore qualifies as does other types of real estate investments.
Our recommendation is to Stay away from investing your IRA money into an S corporation. S corporations only allow individuals (not entities) and certain permitted trusts to be investors. So if your IRA (an entity) is the investor, the S Corp would lose its status and its tax rate would change to a potentially less favorable one. Roth accounts can be used but take time to accumulate larger funds portfolios.
When purchasing Land with funds coming from an IRA, remember that the IRA itself must purchase the Land and hold the grant deed. All property taxes for that Land must also be paid from the IRA. The self-directed IRA should be opened first with cash or funds rolled over from other IRAs, 401ks, retirement plans, and then the Land should be purchased. Large tax penalties can occur if these transactions are not done properly. Proper care in deciding when to sell or lease the Land is also important. Land, especially pre-developed Land, is a long-term investment and often needs to be held for a minimum of five to seven years to produce the highest returns.
You can leverage a Land purchase with as little at 15% down and amortize 20 years with Farm Credit. They are located throughout the United Sates with different names. In the Land Brokerage business they are called “The Land Bank”. Farm Credit has had the most consistent programs for Land investors. Because of your increased buying power when you use leverage, the profits you make from the ability to use leverage can greatly outweigh the tax associated.
For more information we also recommend you visit, IRAAA™ is a nonprofit education-oriented alliance of financial planning, real estate, legal, banking, investment, and accounting professionals interested in further developing the niche industry of Self-Directed IRA & 401(k) investing. Their Promise is “IRA Association of America aims to provide affordable, unbiased and comprehensive education on the topic of investing with a Self-Directed IRA or Solo 401(k)”.
Make sure that you Google “Self Directed Retirement Accounts” and other associated words. Do your homework. This article’s sole mission is to stimulate your creative juices and reveal part of this untold story. After all you be in control of your own destiny and have the benefits of being a Land Owner. The greatest freedom there is.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Happy 4th of Julyl!

A very Happy 4th of July
to all our Friends!

May you enjoy the holiday weekend

and remember to give thanks for

the men and women of the US

Military for protecting our Freedom!






Enjoy this beautiful tribute to America with this
video America the Beautiful!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

LandThink

Today we bring you a copy of an article from "LandThink"
about investing today as a hedge against inflation. Rural
land is about the only investment you can make that
you can thoroughly enjoy for years in the future,
while watching it grow in value. It is NOT a consumable
commodity. If you are looking for a good investment
in this recession, look to land. Give us a call for
more information about owning a piece of East Texas!


Land hedges both inflation and systemic risk
On Thursday, May 6th, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell almost 1,000 points, a little more than nine percent, in 16 minutes, and no one knows why. At day’s end, the DJIA was down only 342 points, and everyone didn’t think that was too bad…considering the place it had visited.

Fingers of possible blame pointed in many directions—Greeks bearing debt, Jihadist glitches, automatic computer-trading programs, a trader’s “fat-finger” mistake, jitters about financial-reform legislation, too much sugar in Wall Street’s afternoon power drinks, a Madoff mole wreaking revenge.

A thousand point drop got me to thinking.

I’d been talking to my daughter, Molly, a few minutes before the DJIA’s dipsy-doodle. She works on the speed desk at Bloomberg News in Manhattan, feeding headlines and financial news into the company’s terminals. She’s up to the minute on this stuff; I’m a lagging indicator, often intentionally so. We were talking about the future and how to prepare for it.

I said I thought people in their 20s and 30s were going to have a much tougher time earning livings and preparing for retirement than Baby Boomers, because the global financial system — and the American end of it, in particular — seemed increasingly volatile, increasingly fragile and increasingly vulnerable to system-breakups, from both internal and external sources. System risks, in short.

This got me thinking about hedges.

Gold is often touted as a hedge against inflation. But when I looked at gold price and the Consumer Price Index, I saw that inflation had risen with reasonable consistency year to year while gold was volatile—spiking in 1980 and during the last several years, but lagging the CPI for most of the years in between. One study I reviewed showed the average annual rate of return on gold between 1979 through 2008 was 5.37 percent, most of the gain coming during the last decade, compared with stocks at 11.9 percent, 3-month T-bills at 5.9 percent and rare coins above 10 percent.

Gold is a fear purchase, not an inflation hedge. If you think it’s likely that the world will fall apart, you put gold in your bedroom safe so you can buy guns and toilet paper. If that time comes, inflation will have solved itself through collapse.

Gold doesn’t behave like a commodity, because people buy it for reasons other than consumption and utility. It’s a non-renewable resource like oil, but it doesn’t get used up like oil, coal and natural gas. It seems to me that people use it as a financial worry bead, fingering it more in times of high stress.

When Molly set up her retirement account last year, I gave her the conventional advice about index funds and broad baskets of stocks and bonds. But what I wanted her to do was to set up a real-estate IRA to buy land, which she couldn’t do.

An inflation hedge should track inflation…and do a little better.

Between 1999 and 2009, the average annual inflation rate has been 2.6 percent. For the 10 years preceding, it was 3 percent.

It’s difficult to measure national returns on timberland investments, because tracts vary so much in size, management, types, length of ownership and other factors. The database at the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries is widely used for comparing investments, but it’s skewed toward large tracts and tax-exempt investors, primarily pension funds. The same bias is found in NCREIF’s farmland index, all of whom are tax-exempt investors.

Nonetheless, the NCREIF average annual timberland return in the 20 years between 1990 and 2009 was 2.76 percent. The average annual return for farmland between 1992 and 2009 was 2.74 percent.

Using the NCREIF indexes, farmland and timberland returns did a bit better than inflation during the last two decades. These types of land investments as measured by NCREIF are reasonably good inflation hedges.

A 2009 study from Jeff Mortimer at J.P. Morgan Investment Analytics & Consulting found that timberland “…has provided an annualized return of 14.60%…” over the past 22 years while correlating “highly with inflation….”

Looking ahead, I see nothing that would suggest that stocks and gold are getting less volatile, and the financial system in which they function seems to be looking more vulnerable, more risky. Whether systemic risk is reduced in the future is anybody’s guess; mine is that it will not.

Gold may be the coin of last resort, but short of total collapse, farmland and timberland appear to be better hedges against both less-than-catastrophic events and inflation. If nothing else, land prices will appreciate due to population growth over the long term. And if the toilet-paper choice is between gold bars and leaves, well….

LandThink is a knowledge base for land investors and sellers to learn about and discuss the various aspects of land investing, selling, ownership, and trends in land real estate. Get Land Smart!

Related Articles
Timberland investing: Risk and reward in the woods
Stocks vs. land: Which is the better investment?
Investing in Land: True Value

Watch for more articles about real

estate in East Texas...

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Memorial Day Project

Enjoyed the Memorial Day weekend around
our house (which is for sale). That means
there is always something that needs doing.

If you are looking for a ground cover, you should
look into Grape Ivy. It is planted in just a pot
out in the flowerbed, but as you can see it has
taken over. That makes it a great ground cover!

After a normal weekend of cleaning up around the house,
taking calls and showing property, we used Saturday
morning and Sunday morning to give the storage
barn a new lease on life. After power washing,
the old paint was just about naked, so I think the
old girl really enjoyed this first coat of
"Red Hot" barn paint! She will need a
2nd coat, but looks much better after the first
one. A little rebuilding on the doors and a 2nd
coat, and she will look great again!


Even the leaves were painted
in this "red for all" weekend!

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Happy Memorial Day to all our
Friends and Family!
There is no country in the world
which can match the United
States for Freedom and the
Pursuit of Happiness!

We give thanks for every man and woman
serving in the military, protecting
our way of life, and especially
for those who made the ultimate
sacrifice for their country!

Monday, May 17, 2010

Doggies play at the pond

Continuing the joys at the pond over the weekend with the
doggies and their favorite babysitter, the downed tree...

Downed tree, alias babysitter

Brat stalks tree

Brat sniffs tree to see if she wants to attack

Brat attacks tree

Tree attempts to eat Brat

Doozie at the Pond

Doozie

Doozie bored with the tree, moves on

Brat (Bratwurst Von Lick'um Steins) is the alpha dog,
hyperactive and inquisitive. Doozie (Shepherd and
Catahoula) is the quiet 2nd child, strong, fast, but
timid and terribly afraid of storms

Beautiful aquatic flowers at end of pond

Pond flowers, vu 2

Beautiful yellow aquatic plant flowers at the end of the pond

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Mother's Day weekend by the Pond


Mother's Day has passed but the joy of living in
East Texas never gets old. We had the kids out for the
weekend and enjoyed the time outside and time
by the pond playing with our family dogs and
feeding our ever growing catfish. A huge downed tree
that fell long ago is a great playground for the
little dogs. They seem to have the imagination
of small children poking into all the crevasses
and looking excitedly for bugs or lizards.

Another view across the pond

Lily pads on the pond

The lily pads are all along the banks of the pond and
the Water Lilies are in full bloom

Thursday, April 29, 2010

A picture tour out FM 1504

Entry April 29, 2010
Even a trip out to take photos of a listing can be an adventure.
I traveled out FM1504 to take Virtual Tour Views of a beautiful
wooded retreat with a beautiful estate home on Tuesday. Not
only were the flowers at that home stunning (mostly roses),
but the fields along the way made it a pleasurable drive.

Here's a selection of the flower pictures
from our listing CC1733 on 20 Wooded AC

Roses

roses

roses and bridal wreath


irises

bridal wreath

These were taken along FM 1504 between
Edgewood and the Interstate

Don't wait...come on out to the country and enjoy the
best state highways in the country, the most beautiful
land and the friendly people in East Texas!

Thursday, April 22, 2010

April in Edom-April 17, 2010

Entry April 22, 2010

We wandered around this weekend (taking our own advice)
and went Saturday morning
to the April in Edom Festival. There
was to be rain later in the day, but the morning was

sunshiny and bright. Edom is a great little community
(referred to as "artsy"). There
were lots of arts and crafts
available, music, good food and just a good time.
The best
part was driving along the highways and
enjoying the azaleas blooming plus fields of

Indian Paint Brushes. It is a great time to be
out and about. Here are some

pictures of our adventures.

The flower shop at Edom during April in Edom


Be sure to drop by the Rockin' Robin Ice Cream Shop for great
ice cream anytime you are in Edom!

Views from the April in Edom Festival April 17, 2010

Great flower views along the way there and back to Canton!

Monday, April 19, 2010

April is fun in East Texas!

We hope you will come back often to see what is
happening in and around Canton, and
the rest of North East Texas!

Entry April 14, 2010

These pictures were sent to me and even though they
aren't East Texas, they represent some of the best of
Texas as a whole. These were recently taken down in
the Hill Country, which is very like out
rolling hills of East Texas. Hope you enjoy!

If you aren't from Texas, you may not know that the state
flower is the Bluebonnet. You will find it to be worth
the trip just to see them in full bloom in Texas. Get
out and drive around if you live in our fair
state. You will love it!

Entry: April 6, 2010
Please visit the counties surrounding Canton in
North East Texas in the Spring. It is
really worth the drive!

On the calendar below please note several suggested
events that might bring you out to East Texas to enjoy...

Event #1
April 14-17: Canton, TX (VZ Co Fairgrounds)
62nd Annual Van Zandt County Fair
http://www.vanzandtcountyfair.com

Event #2
April 16-18: Mineola, Grand Saline, Fruitvale, Edgewood,
Wills Point Historic US Hwy 80 Garage Sale all
along the Hwy
http://www.easttexasguide.com/US80Sale.php

Event #3
April 17: Wills Point, TX Downtown
Parade for the Wills Point Blue Bird Festival
http://www.willspointbluebird.com

Event #4
April 17-18: Edom, TX Downtown
April in Edom
http://www.aprilinedom.com

Event #5
April 24: Wills Point, TX (Downtown)
Wills Point Blue Bird Festival
http://www.willspointbluebird.com

These are low cost or free events which allow you to
learn more about our area and enjoy the
beauty of East Texas.