22
The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

The Future of Corporate Agriculture

David SackettGrowth Farms Australia

14th Sep 2012

Page 2: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Growth Farms Business

$320M under management– 190,000 sheep– 15,000 cattle– 17,000 ha winter crop– 10,500 ha summer crop

Page 3: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Farm Locations

Properties

Staff

Office

Page 4: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• GF works with agents and clients to– Develop strategy for Australian ag.– Search for & evaluate opportunities

• Business plans• Financials

– Negotiate acquisition of land, plant , stock, water

• Two factors drive investment performance:– Purchase price– Management

Acquisitions

Page 5: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Run as an incorporated entity?• What isn’t it?

– Everything other than small-medium scale family farms

• Large scale family farms (>$10-20M invested?)• Institutions eg super funds• Foreign/city investors.

What is Corporate Agriculture?

Page 6: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Great Southern• AACo• Stanbroke• Prime Ag• Tandou• Consolidated Pastoral

Track record of “Corporates”

Page 7: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

1500

Page 8: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Medium to high net worth incl Family offices• Australian and overseas• $3-$30M, some >$50M investment • Long term view• Australia low risk (laws, economy, politics)• Usually need help with acquisitions and management

Individuals - Corporates

Page 9: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Long term view (but act short term)• Australian institutions have little interest

– Fragmented– Unprofessional– “Gloom and doom”– Low operating yield– Volatility

Institutions – (super funds etc)

Page 10: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Is Big Better?

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

Smallest 20% 300 hd

20 to 40% 1000 hd

40 to 60% 1900 hd

60 to 80% 3300 hd

Largest 20% 7500 hd

Op

era

tin

g R

etu

rn (

%)

Source: ABARE

Page 11: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Is Big Better?

Page 12: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

“Family Farm” “Corporate”

Flexible “Outside” constraintsPatient capital Specific targets (inflexible?)Nimble Can be poorly responsiveConstrained by scale Scale often not a constraintLifestyle and business Business approachSkill level? Access to expertiseOften capital constrained Capital availableGovernance? Governance?

Pros and Cons

Page 13: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Own land and Lease to Operator Own land and Operate

Lower yield – 2-4% Higher yield – 4-6%Consistent return More variable returnEffect on land value/growth? More complexNo direct exposure to prices Provides price exposureNo working capital Need 20-30% working capital

Maximises capital growth

Investment Options

Page 14: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

Australian v US Land Values

US

Page 15: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

“Any measure that puts further barriers in place….. and reduces the flow of foreign capital into Australian agriculture will adversely affect the performance of the agricultural sector. “

ABARES 2011

Foreign Investment

Page 16: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• 1% of entities

• 11% of land

• 9% water

• Largest in 09-10 was US, then Malaysia, then UK

Foreign Investment In Agriculture

Page 17: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• 50% milk processing

• 60% sugar refining

• 40% meat processing

• 50% of wheat exporters

Foreign Investment In Agribusiness

Page 18: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Introduces capital– AACo– Vestey

• Introduces technology– Chaffey Bro’s– Us Cotton farmers

• Foreign investment +15% GDP

+

Good or bad?

Page 19: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Open, dynamic, competitive helped by foreign capital

OR

• Less productive, lower land values, less dynamic?

Choice

Page 20: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Well informed– High level– Detail

• Straight• Value v Price• Responsive

A good agent (a buyers perspective!)

Page 21: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012

• Agriculture will become more “corporate”• Life style and off farm income will underpin

many small farms.• There is much more foreign investment in

agribusiness than in agriculture• Foreign capital helps underpin new technology

and improved productivity.

In summary

Page 22: The Future of Corporate Agriculture David Sackett Growth Farms Australia 14 th Sep 2012