The Conduit Layer
How Institutions Hold Land Without Appearing To — Shell Companies, Layered Subsidiaries, and the Brazil Precedent That Shows Exactly What the U.S. Architecture Contains
This is a new kind of investigative work. Randy Gipe directs all research questions, editorial judgment, and structural conclusions. Claude (Anthropic) assists with source analysis, hypothesis testing, and drafting. Neither produces this alone.
We publish this collaboration openly because transparency about method is inseparable from integrity of analysis. FSA — Forensic System Architecture — is the intellectual property of Randy Gipe.
How the Conduit Architecture Works — The Standard Structure
Institutional farmland investment follows a consistent structural pattern that has been refined across fifteen years of market development. The pattern is not designed primarily for concealment — it is designed for tax efficiency, liability insulation, and operational flexibility. Concealment is a consequence of the design, not its stated purpose. That distinction matters for FSA analysis: the architecture does not need intent to produce opacity. It produces opacity automatically as a structural output of its other design goals.
The county parcel record — the document visible to anyone who looks — shows an LLC name that reveals nothing about its ultimate owner. The beneficial ownership chain above it is not required to be disclosed anywhere. Before the Corporate Transparency Act's 2024 implementation, no federal mechanism required it. After the March 2025 CTA exemption for domestic entities, no federal mechanism requires it again. The chain exists. The chain is invisible. Both by design.
The Brazil Precedent — What the Architecture Does When Tested
FSA's Unknown Unknown Protocol requires investigators to find cases where the architecture has already been stress-tested — where the structural logic has been pushed to a point that produced visible evidence of what it contains. For the institutional farmland LLC architecture, that case exists. It happened in Brazil. It is documented. And it involved the same institution that is the largest institutional farmland owner in the United States.
Beginning in 2008, TIAA established a joint venture with Brazilian agricultural conglomerate Cosan to acquire farmland in Brazil's Cerrado region and the MATOPIBA agricultural frontier — the interior states of Maranhão, Tocantins, Piauí, and Bahia. The stated purpose: investment in Brazilian agricultural productivity. The structural challenge: Brazilian law limits foreign ownership of rural land to 25% of any municipality's rural area, with additional restrictions on foreign corporations holding agricultural land.
The structure TIAA and Cosan built to navigate those restrictions:
Primary joint venture entity. Initially 81% TIAA-owned, 19% Cosan. Brazilian corporation — technically domestic. TIAA's ownership stake structured to appear below foreign ownership thresholds while maintaining economic control through shareholder agreements.
49% TIAA, 51% Cosan — the TCGA fund vehicle. Majority Brazilian ownership on paper. TIAA entitled to 97% of profits per leaked Cosan documents. Cosan held majority legal ownership. TIAA held majority economic ownership. The gap between legal form and economic reality is the architecture.
Each land parcel held through a separate special purpose vehicle — the same structure used in U.S. farmland holdings. Each SPV a Brazilian entity. Each technically compliant with domestic ownership requirements. Each controlled by an ownership chain that terminated at TIAA's U.S. headquarters.
The leaked Cosan documents — obtained and published by AATR, Rede Social, GRAIN, and Chain Reaction Research — showed what the corporate structure was designed to obscure: TIAA held veto power over all investments and was contractually entitled to 97% of the profits from entities nominally majority-owned by a Brazilian partner. The legal form said Brazilian. The economic reality said TIAA.
INCRA — Brazil's National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform — investigated and in 2020 concluded that TIAA/Nuveen's acquisitions violated Brazilian law. The holdings were deemed legally null and void. Land title disputes affecting 1.1 million acres and $2.2 billion in AUM remained unresolved as of early 2026. A 2025 report by Friends of the Earth and Rede Social documented ongoing conflicts in Bahia, with TIAA/Nuveen having formed a new subsidiary — Radar Gestão de Investimentos (2024) — to manage the holdings while investigations continue. No formal charges filed. TIAA denies impropriety and claims compliance. The land remains in dispute.
Deforestation and fires linked to TIAA/Nuveen holdings between 2013 and 2019, documented via satellite imagery and land registries by Chain Reaction Research. This occurred despite TIAA's publicly stated zero-deforestation commitments.
The structure TIAA/Nuveen used in Brazil — layered subsidiaries, joint ventures with local partners, SPVs for individual properties, legal form separated from economic reality — is structurally identical to the structure it uses in the United States. The difference is that Brazil had foreign ownership limits that made the gap between legal form and economic reality a legal violation. The United States has no equivalent domestic institutional ownership limits that the structure could violate.
The FSA observation is precise: the Brazil case does not prove that TIAA/Nuveen is violating U.S. law. It proves that the architecture is capable of separating legal form from economic reality at scale — and that this capability has been deployed by the same institution in a jurisdiction where it produced documented legal violations, INCRA findings of nullity, and unresolved land title disputes affecting 1.1 million acres.
The U.S. architecture cannot produce the same legal violation because the U.S. has no law for it to violate. What it produces instead is the invisibility documented in Post 1: 600,000 to 700,000 acres of American farmland held through county-level LLCs whose names reveal nothing, in a system with no federal beneficial ownership registry, under a CTA exemption that removed the one disclosure mechanism that would have changed that. The architecture is the same. The legal environment is different. The opacity is identical.
The Naming Architecture — How LLCs Are Named to Reveal Nothing
Institutional farmland LLCs follow naming patterns that consistently avoid any identifier connecting the entity to its parent institution. The patterns, documented across investigative journalism and property record analysis, fall into recognizable categories.
Abstract or literary names. "Baloo Enterprises" — the bear from Kipling's Jungle Book. No geographic reference. No institutional reference. No indication of purpose. Registered in Illinois. Holds over 8,400 acres in central Illinois and properties in Kansas. Owned by billionaire Shahid Khan — demonstrating that institutional opacity in farmland LLC naming is not exclusive to pension funds. It is the standard practice of any large-scale farmland investor operating through the county courthouse recording system.
Generic descriptors. "Holdings," "Enterprises," "Investments," "Properties," "Agriculture Asset Management" — terms that describe function without identifying owner. Westchester Group Investment Management, a TIAA/Nuveen subsidiary, sells land to "Lawrence Land Holdings" — owned by Tennessee billionaire Gaylon Lawrence Jr. Two different ultimate owners. One naming convention that reveals neither.
Numbered entities. Radar II Propriedades Agrícolas S.A. in Brazil. Sequential numbering that indicates series membership without revealing the series owner. Standard private equity fund architecture applied to agricultural land.
The research finding: No large-scale academic mapping of LLC naming conventions to institutional parent entities exists for American farmland. The investigative capacity to trace from county courthouse record to ultimate beneficial owner requires legal research, financial document analysis, and cross-jurisdictional database work that county-level recording systems are not designed to support and that no federal registry currently makes easier. The naming architecture does not need to be designed for concealment to produce concealment. It needs only to follow standard LLC naming practice in a system with no beneficial ownership disclosure requirement. The opacity is structural. It is produced by the absence of a requirement, not the presence of a design.
The State Disclosure Landscape — What Exists and What Doesn't
Thirty-one states now have some form of foreign farmland ownership restriction — a number that has grown rapidly since 2021 as legislative concern about Chinese and other adversary-nation farmland acquisition intensified. The legislative energy has been focused almost entirely on foreign ownership. Domestic institutional ownership has attracted almost no equivalent legislative attention — despite being orders of magnitude larger in total acreage.
| Disclosure Type | What It Covers | What It Misses | States |
|---|---|---|---|
| AFIDA Federal Reporting | Foreign persons / entities acquiring U.S. ag land — reports to USDA | Domestic institutional owners entirely. No LLC beneficial ownership chain. 18-24 month reporting delay. | All states (federal) |
| State Foreign Ownership Restrictions | Foreign entities acquiring ag land — prohibitions or acreage limits | Domestic institutional owners. Does not require disclosure of LLC beneficial ownership for domestic entities. | 31 states |
| South Dakota SDCL 43-2A | Foreign entities/governments must limit to 160 acres; annual SOS reports for entities owning ag land disclose location, acres, use, and foreign owners | No full beneficial ownership chain. Only foreign owners disclosed — not domestic institutional chains. No requirement for non-foreign institutional investors to disclose beneficial ownership. | South Dakota only |
| Corporate Transparency Act (pre-March 2025) | Required most LLCs to report beneficial ownership to FinCEN — including agricultural LLCs without exemptions | Large operating companies (20+ employees, $5M+ gross receipts) exempted. Agricultural management companies may qualify. | Federal (all states) |
| CTA Post-March 2025 Interim Rule | Domestic U.S. entities and U.S. persons exempted from reporting requirements | Effectively: all domestic institutional farmland LLC ownership. Foreign entities may still report. The gap is now complete for domestic institutional owners. | Federal (all states) |
THE DISCLOSURE GAP — STATED AS PRECISELY AS THE EVIDENCE ALLOWS
As of March 2026: there is no federal mechanism requiring disclosure of who ultimately owns domestic institutional farmland LLC holdings. There is no state mechanism in any of the 31 states with foreign ownership restrictions that requires equivalent disclosure for domestic institutional owners. South Dakota comes closest — and its statute covers foreign owners within ag land entities, not the full beneficial ownership chain of domestic institutional investors.
The largest institutional farmland owner in the United States — Nuveen Natural Capital, $13.7 billion AUM, 600,000 to 700,000 U.S. acres — is not required to disclose to any federal database, any state database, or any public registry the specific parcels it holds, the LLC names through which it holds them, or the chain of ownership from county-level LLC to ultimate TIAA pension fund beneficiary. That information exists. It is not public. The architecture that makes it not public is the conduit layer.
The Farmland Reserve and the Church — The Architecture Is Not Exclusive to Pension Funds
One of the other large-scale institutional farmland owners identified in the Investigate Midwest reporting is Farmland Reserve Inc. — the agricultural investment arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The LDS Church is one of the largest private landowners in the United States across multiple asset categories. Its farmland holdings are held through the same LLC architecture as pension fund holdings — county-level entities whose names reveal nothing about their ultimate owner.
The FSA observation from this data point is not about any specific institution's practices. It is architectural: the conduit layer of LLC-based farmland ownership is the standard approach for every category of large-scale institutional investor — pension funds, religious organizations, family offices of billionaires, publicly traded REITs, and private equity funds. The architecture is not a choice of a particular type of investor. It is the default structure of the system. That is what makes it structurally significant rather than individually attributable.
TIAA — the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association — was founded in 1918 by Andrew Carnegie to provide retirement security for American educators. It is a nonprofit. Its beneficiaries are teachers, professors, researchers, and nonprofit workers. Its mission is genuine. Its social legitimacy is real.
That legitimacy is also, structurally, the most effective insulation layer in the entire domestic institutional farmland ownership architecture. When the largest farmland acquirer in the United States is the retirement fund for American teachers, the political and reputational cost of scrutinizing its ownership structure is higher than if the acquirer were a hedge fund or a foreign sovereign wealth vehicle. The legitimacy of the capital source functions as insulation for the opacity of the ownership structure.
FSA does not claim this insulation is deliberate. It claims it is structural. TIAA does not need to deploy its legitimacy as a shield — the system deploys it automatically. Any investigation of institutional farmland ownership opacity that reaches TIAA faces the framing challenge that "teacher retirement savings" is not a threatening phrase. The architecture of legitimacy is as much a part of the conduit layer as the LLC naming conventions.
The Brazil precedent is the place where the legitimacy frame and the documented behavior most visibly diverge: the institution whose mission is teacher retirement security was found by INCRA to have acquired 1.1 million acres of Brazilian farmland through structures that violated Brazilian law, linked to 2,970 hectares of deforestation, in ongoing land title disputes as of early 2026 — while forming a new subsidiary in 2024 to manage those holdings and positioning for further expansion. Both things are true simultaneously. The legitimacy is real. The Brazil findings are real. The architecture contains both.


