Melbourne’s FarmCap, a non-bank lender specialising in agricultural assets, has graduated from investing on a deal-by-deal basis to setting up a fund.
The firm is aiming to raise $100 million for its inaugural FarmCap Private Credit Agricultural Mortgage Fund (Diversified) to lend to Australia’s thriving agri-sector which it predicts will grow from $82 billion in farm production to $100 billion by 2030.
Potential investors have been told to think of 9.5 per cent to 11.5 per cent in annual return – or 5 to 7 per cent over the cash rate – from a portfolio that will include first and second-mortgage loans. It will charge base fees of 1.75 per cent, and a 15 per cent performance fee after a minimum return of 4 per cent over the bank bill swap rate.
The typical borrower is a farmer seeking up to $15 million, to be paid back over six months to 24 months, to fund broadacre, irrigated cropping, livestock and horticulture needs.
The $100 million fund is accompanied by a direct fund, which will house additional stakes acquired in individual deals.
The sales pitch highlighted FarmCap has $40 million worth of deals under offer already, and sources its deals on the ground. Its founder Jonathan Weinstock was previously the head of lending at Ecosse Capital Partners, another agribusiness specialist.
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From the column
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