ARM’s Equity Solution

Ag Resource Management (ARM) offers a solution to farmers with limited equity. ARM doesn’t look at equity like a traditional bank does, because ARM uses this season’s growing crop, crop insurance and program payments as collateral.

If a bank determines they can’t renew a farmer’s loan, the farmer can work with ARM to finance the entire loan or just a portion. Usually the bank will handle traditional term lending, and ARM will create a plan for the farm’s operating loan. ARM can step in when there isn’t enough equity for a traditional banker to approve a loan and provide the needed liquidity for a farmer, based on the projected crop. This partnership allows the farmer to continue farming.

ARM also consults with the farmer to help identify where issues may exist on the farm. The process of sitting down together and outlining a budget helps determine exactly where the money is going and where the farm can tighten its budget to get the most ROI out of the loan. For example, family living expenses may still be on the high end compared to where commodity prices currently sit. When expenses are detailed, it’s often easy to find areas to trim back.

Rent is another example of a line item that can often be reduced. It’s not an easy discussion, but once an analysis is complete on a field-by-field basis and the expenses are broken down, it’s fairly easy to see where rent is too high to create a profitable scenario. A farm’s highest producing fields aren’t necessarily the most profitable. Often, the highest producing fields are also the ones with the highest rent. When farming a particular field is not profitable, a farmer must decide to either renegotiate the rent or give up the land. Giving up hard-won land contracts can be very difficult for a farmer, but sometimes it’s the best choice for the long term.

ARM also creates a cashflow analysis, which includes the crop budget. Looking at input costs and actual production history (APH), ARM works with the farmer to determine where to spend the loan dollars for the best possible return — sometimes optimizing profit means accepting a smaller yield and benefitting from reduced seed and input costs.

Lastly, ARM takes a holistic approach, looking beyond just that season’s crop to help address issues that affect the entire operation. This perspective helps farmers focus their resources throughout the year, allowing them to operate much more efficiently and reach their long-term goals.

Contact your nearest ARM location to get started.

HOW ARM WORKS WITH FARMERS

Every farm situation is different, and many financial challenges arise through no fault of the farmer. Listening to a farmer’s pressure points allows ARM to adapt and fit that farmer’s situation. Next, attention shifts to the farm’s balance sheet and cashflow. ARM needs to understand the leverage position on the balance sheet to attract alternative financing solutions. Then it becomes possible to secure a line of credit for the season.

After identifying a financing solution, ARM sets up a systematic process to help manage risk. For example, ARM helps the farmer acquire the proper amount of crop insurance, spend capital on the inputs required to realize the highest potential yield and pay the loan when the crop is harvested. This in-depth involvement in the operation increases the chance of success.

ARM also serves as an advisor to help farmers right-size their balance sheets. This might include recommending the sale of a parcel of land or a piece of equipment. These changes can put the farmer in a better position to secure financing through the bank in the following year.

“We’re not trying to compete with community banks. We can partner with the bank to help them continue working with a farm client when the financial situation or regulatory pressures might make that difficult.” -Jason Brown, ARM market leader

Partnering with Farmers

ARM wants to partner with the farmer, the bank, distributors and other input suppliers because the best approach gets everyone working together in the best interest of the farmer. Along with the loan, ARM offers farmers budget and risk-management advice. Having a deep understanding of crop insurance, they can guide a farmer through those discussions and decisions, as well.

The farmer receives a monthly loan statement, and at the end of the loan, ARM collects harvest information and conducts a reconciliation, showing the end results of the season. This can sometimes lead to finding a revenue insurance claim because of a shortfall. Or it might result in finding another area of budget leakage that can be corrected for the next year. Reconciliation helps the farmer develop a strong understanding of and confidence about where the dollars were spent and how that affected total production and return on investment.

ARM provides the support you need to get the most out of your farm. Struggling operations as well as those simply looking to tighten up their business practices can benefit from the ARM crop-as-collateral lending model and the guidance its experienced staff can provide. ARM does ag finance differently. Is it time your farm did, too?

ALTERNATIVE FINANCE OFFERS SOLUTIONS

After seeing years of tightening margins, declining commodity prices and eroding equity,  Ag Resource Management (ARM) developed the Ag Input Loan to help bring equity back to farmers who need it through a partnership with ag retailers and ag input distributors. Retailers have long-standing relationships with their customers, but they may be concerned about the credit quality or their cashflow and aren’t able to carry the farmer’s unsecured trade credit for the season. ARM can partner with the distributor, then take the distributor’s input sales and convert that to a secured loan transaction. This makes it part of an overall budget that ARM manages and monitors throughout the growing season.

 “Ag Resource Management pioneered the concept of monetizing crop revenue streams. By combining the math and science of determining both yield and price market values and their relative insurance values, ARM can reliably predict a farm’s potential revenue stream.” -Leroy Startz, Director of Market Channel Development at Ag Resource Management

The retailer can then secure the sale of inputs to the long-term farmer-client and wait until the crop is sold for payment. They benefit from not having to carry accounts receivable on an unsecured trade credit status. They’ve now become part of a secured loan transaction because of their partnership with ARM.

As a forward-looking capital provider, ARM does not rely on land or equipment equity to make a loan decision. Rather, the loan decision is based on the farm’s capacity to generate an income stream from a growing crop. To do that, ARM uses a proprietary financial model to apply appropriate discounts, which generates a risk-adjusted crop loan that syncs with the farm’s budget. In the event of a crop failure, the revenue stream is protected with a well-structured crop insurance policy that maximizes farm revenue.

Once established, ARM sets up a systematic process to help manage risk on the loan by maintaining a close working relationship with the farmer. For example, ARM helps the farmer acquire the proper amount of insurance, spend capital on the inputs required to realize the highest potential yield and pay the loan when the crop is harvested. This in-depth involvement in the operation increases the chance of success.

Offering the Ag Input Loan benefits the retailer in two ways: He maintains his long-term relationship with that farmer, and he can offer a credit product that allows him to compete with other ag retailers who are trying to sell to the same farmer. However, the retailer has the advantage of shared risk with ARM, working under a well-documented credit structure.

ARM may also be able to help farmers who have filed bankruptcy.  ARM does this under special provisions and protection provided by the bankruptcy court.

To learn more, contact your nearest Area Manager or visit us at armlend.com

AG RETAILERS CAN NOW OFFER ALTERNATIVE FINANCE SOLUTIONS

A persistent credit crunch has entangled the American agricultural community, despite the opening of more markets than ever before. That probably isn’t front-page news. For participants in agriculture, the real news lies in practical paths for navigating the economic challenges faced by growers and the businesses that supply them.

HOW WE GOT HERE

A little more than 15 years ago, news of world population growth and a rapidly growing Chinese middle class wanting to increase the quality of their diet put a focus on U.S. agriculture’s responsibility and opportunity to help feed the world. An invigorated industry push began to improve genetics to increase yields. Additionally, the Renewable Fuels Act started consuming corn which increased demand, and commodity prices and margins soared.

But the upturn didn’t last long. Commodity prices and margins began to tighten. Then, consolidation of farms, manufacturers and suppliers began to shrink the number of players in the agriculture industry. This sequence of industry events caused available credit to drain out of the market.

HAS EQUITY LEFT THE ROOM?

As the ag retail industry began to consolidate, larger companies purchased many of the smaller family-owned businesses. Many of these smaller retailers had established stable customer bases in their communities where they felt comfortable extending credit. Once those businesses became extensions of major national distributors, that capital began disappearing. They had to follow new policies that determined credit limits, and credit was pulled away from the market.

Over the past five to seven years, there’s been no improvement in commodity prices. Some financial institutions still extend credit to farmers and rely on equipment and land equity as collateral. However, much of that equity has been used up. Thus, a real credit crunch exists in the marketplace for farmers who must make arrangements for seasonal capital to cover their annual crop production costs. It’s given rise to alternative financing and paved a new way to bring capital to production agriculture. 

INTEGRATING NEW SUPPORT TOOLS

ARM is developing a Partner Portal that will allow retailers and distributors to monitor ARM accounts in real-time through an online dashboard. Retailers will be able to view every farmer loan they participate in and create monthly loan reports. ARM also offers a Master Program Agreement to its retail and distributor partners. The agreement serves as a roadmap on how ARM and its partners do business together throughout the season, detailing the responsibilities and obligations of both parties. If the season requires additional sales and seasonal credit to the producer, it provides a process to communicate with one another about those needs.  This communication ensures that changes sync up with a revised and jointly approved crop budget.

ALL-IN LOAN OPTION

Another loan tool available from ARM is the All-In loan, which it sells directly to the producer. ARM can provide the working capital a producer needs to produce a crop, make land and equipment payments and cover day-to-day operation and living expenses. ARM provides an option so distributors and retailers can take care of their customers, whether they purchase their inputs from them that year or not.

To learn more, contact your nearest Area Manager or check us out at ARMLEND.COM

Ag Resource Management recently named Rasool Alizadeh as CFO & President of Capital Markets.

As CFO & President of Capital Markets, Alizadeh is focused on strategic funding and liquidity needs at ARM. Rasool joined from Ygrene Energy Fund Inc. where he served as Head of Capital Markets and Treasury focused on PACE financing. Rasool was also at SMBC Nikko Securities America, Inc. in the Structured Finance Group and was the head banker responsible for the term Asset Backed Securities (“ABS”) initiative focusing on new issue origination in autos, credit cards, student loans, and esoteric ABS including transportation (i.e. rail, aircraft, shipping, barge, etc.) as well as off-the-run specialty finance and CLO opportunities.

With 15 years structured finance experience, Rasool spent time with Standard & Poor’s (“S&P”), as a primary analyst in the ABS rating services group focused on esoteric mortgage related securitization and in the Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (“RMBS”) group focused on mortgage related new issue products. He also spent time at RBC Capital Markets (“RBC”) where he was an originator for both warehouse and balance sheet lending relationships as well as an original team member for the term ABS build-out. He has handled restructuring, investor relations, deal structuring and execution, rating agency processes, and portfolio management.

Key Takeaways:

  • Rasool provides and facilitates debt/equity funding and liquidity needs to specialty finance platforms. He provides financial forecasting and asset management for a newly established business and/or industry
  • He is a global banking and securitization professional with proven experience in lending, securitization, ratings, and debt/equity financing (syndicated loans/credit/working capital facilities)
  • Expertise includes identifying and analyzing credit risk, detailed due diligence, and deal execution within multiple asset classes
  • Rasool is a strong communicator with proven ability to creatively generate revenue through identification, coordination and marketing of products
  • He holds an M.B.A. from Columbia Business School, a B.S. in Business Administration from University of Denver, and B.A. in Economics from St. Lawrence University
  • Rasool spent 3 years playing professional soccer

Even in 2020, there are many farming operations that simply don’t have the bandwidth to have dedicated individuals in place to manage tasks such as marketing, accounting, or risk management. What’s more, razor thin margins due to softened commodity prices and depleted equity have placed even greater emphasis on these categories.

Enter, COVID19. The economic destruction this pandemic has caused has rippled across multiple key industries, the crash of crude oil demand being the most notable. For agriculture, if fuel demand is low, then so is the demand for blends of ethanol and biodiesel. The sector of our food chain to be most mortifyingly hard hit is for our livestock producers, which has forced the mass euthanizing of animals ready for harvest with no processing plants to take them to. Aside from the fact that between the collapse of biofuel and meat demand, there’s also considerably less demand for the grains needed to produce them. So where will this put us in the coming months? If you’re concerned with your financial and risk projections for the current growing season and beyond, keep these tips in mind:

  • Make sure that your crop insurance policy levels, APH, and acres are accurate
  • Make sure that you are correctly signed up with the FSA
  • Understand where your floor of insurance coverage is and the resulting cash flow
  • Stress test cash flow with $2.75 – $2.30 corn and $8.60 – $7.60 soybeans given the above
  • Understand that FSA payments will likely be a necessary part of cash flow
  • Prepare to take marketing risk off the table should a summer volatility opportunity arise
  • Make sure you are applying for all possible government assistance payments. Seek help if you are not sure.

It’s our pleasure to announce the promotion of Daniel Grube to Area Manager for Ag Resource Management’s Richland office.

Dan is a graduate of the University of Toledo, and went on to work in community, business and middle-market banking as an ag lender until joining the ARM team two and a half years ago. He grew up on a family farm which is owned an operated by his brother to this day. Dan enjoys being part of the ARM team because he gets to stay close to his first love in life—farming. He says, “My first love was farming, but I think I enjoy ag lending more now because I can do more with it, and the people I get to meet and work with is so vast now.  We’re helping farmers and agribusinesses flourish—not just in my home state of Ohio or where I work in Michigan, but nationally.”

Grube has held a few different responsibilities during his tenure at ARM thus far.  He came on board in a Senior Loan Officer role supporting three locations. When he transitioned to the Relationship Manager role in the fall of 2018, Dan started spending much of his time in Richland and ultimately supporting 100% of the Richland efforts starting in the fall of 2019. His energy, relationships and commitment to the ARM model will serve him well in his new role.  Dan’s leadership and skill set will allow for a smooth transition and we look forward to his continued success in his new role.

The 2020 planting season has gotten off to an exceptional start for most of the United States, but with erratic economic behaviors in play, that could lead projections to be really good or really bad. At ARM, we’re always looking forward. Although the COVID19 pandemic has thrown a wrench in food supply chains, current production is charging forward with full speed ahead. It’s safe to say that in other regards, this year has shaped up to be just as interesting as its predecessor, which underscores the need for farmers to focus on the coming months just as much as the present. Here are seven factors to keep in mind during and after planting season wraps up.

  1. Prevented Planting: If prevented planting exists or potentially exists, stay in frequent contact with your crop insurance agent. Specific discussions as planting progresses can help you maximize benefits. Items such as but not limited to the following are relevant:
    • Eligible Acres by crop and county, total eligible acres by county
    • Guarantees per acre
    • First and second crop planting opportunities
    • Plant dates, late planting periods and restrictions about following first crop with a potential second crop
    • Yield impacts for the following year
    • Farm program impacts
  1. Planting Progress and Record Keeping: Having a well-defined and written plan of your field operations is important as well as contingency plans to keep your team aligned as the season progresses. Keeping up with hybrids, plant dates, acres planted by day. Recording these so they can be shared with multiple parties as planting progresses and is completed (FSA, Crop Insurance Agent, Consultant, etc.) Has your agent provided you with a tool to do this?
  2. Safety: As the old saying goes, “Safety is no accident.” It’s something that always seems so second nature to most, however being aware of your surroundings can be the difference between a smooth day in the field and a trip to the emergency room.
  3. Maintenance: What’s the schedule? Who is performing daily checks? What’s the getting started and shutting down process?
  4. Field to Field: What is the process? Who is helping? What precautions can be taken to ensure safe movement of equipment?
  5. Taking Care of The Team: Who is providing field support and making sure that people get adequate rest, nourishment and employees are cared for during the busy time?  Is there someone there to hold the boss accountable to say, ”Enough is enough, time for a break?”
  6. Next Steps: Are you thinking about the next step as soon as the planter is parked?  Does post-season maintenance wait until the risk of replant has passed? What is the next field operation and are we prepared for it?
Brad Terral, Executive Chairman & Founder

 

The data movement in agriculture continues to gain momentum. As enthusiasm grows, tech companies churn out more and more data with greater relevance to producers. The question becomes: Are you prepared to interpret this flood of information and put it to use in day-to-day decisions about production and risk-management?

In order to adopt field-level information, it must be served up in a way that an average farmer trying to manage day-to-day operations can digest and use to make decisions. Essentially, farmers can benefit from a partner who sorts through this information and puts it into context, and that’s exactly what Ag Resource Management (ARM) does. ARM uses it to measure and manage income and risk. We provide alternative capital to farmers while staying close to the collateral — which is this season’s crop — and providing real-time measurement.

Capital markets need a company to use technology to measure the crop in a predictable way. ARM’s technology fills that gap. By synthesizing something out of the vast quantities of field data that capital markets can digest and fund, ARM’s clients reap the benefit of capital support they could not otherwise access. ARM has become the translator of field-level information which not only keeps farmers farming but allows them to grow their businesses.

An ag loan is just like the crop it represents — it’s alive. Every single day it changes, so managing that capital as part of a portfolio of changing loans is not a simple proposition. ARM relies strictly on the value of the crop, crop insurance and programs around it, so we must be razor-sharp on the valuation of the crop, tracking the minutest change as the crop matures. It’s not hard; it simply takes a methodology and system to track that level of detail.

Synthesis is ARM’s proprietary data software that integrates a farmer’s contextualized data with financial capital and information. It speeds up the loan process by monetizing not only the insured value but also the value of the growing crop measured above crop insurance. Simply put, it quickly calculates what something is worth in the future. For a growing crop, however, it’s not only about the math. It also involves the progress of the crop.

Synthesis calculates pricing and yield information, budget changes and insurance changes, to name a few factors in the complex data analysis. It calculates in real-time and expresses results as income and risk so decisions can be made quickly.

The groundbreaking nature of Synthesis lies in its control architecture as well as its ability to serve the farmer with income and risk information in a financial context. This information can help producers identify weak spots in their operation, improve efficiency and ultimately solve problems.

LOS ANGELES–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Ares Management Corporation (NYSE: ARES) (“Ares”) announced today that funds managed by its Alternative Credit strategy have provided a $450 million revolving asset-backed credit facility secured by agricultural production loans originated by Ag Resource Management (“ARM”).

ARM is a specialty finance company focused on bringing financial and risk management solutions to farmers and agribusinesses nationwide. By combining proprietary technology and a deep understanding of crop agriculture, ARM provides innovative agribusiness loan and crop insurance products that deliver operating capital to American farmers who seek financing for growing crops. Loans can be made directly to the producer or arranged in conjunction with a local distributor. The loans are secured by the crops, crop insurance and government payments instead of the farmer’s property or equipment, which is the case in traditional agriculture lending.

“Just as ARM has sought to fill the gaps of the agriculture lending market by providing unique and customized financial solutions for farmers, this investment demonstrates Ares’ ability to address similar gaps in the capital markets by providing unique asset-focused capital solutions for specialty finance companies like ARM,” said Joel Holsinger, Partner of Ares and Co-Head of Ares Alternative Credit. “We are excited to support ARM in its next phase of growth.”

About Ares Management Corporation

Ares Management Corporation (NYSE: ARES) is a leading global alternative investment manager operating three integrated businesses across Credit, Private Equity and Real Estate. Ares Management’s investment groups collaborate to deliver innovative investment solutions and consistent and attractive investment returns for fund investors throughout market cycles. Ares Management’s global platform had $144 billion of assets under management as of September 30, 2019 with approximately 1,200 employees in over 20 offices in more than 10 countries. Please visit www.aresmgmt.com for additional information.

About Ares Alternative Credit

Ares’ Alternative Credit strategy focuses on direct lending and investing in assets that generate contractual cash flows and fills gaps in the capital markets between credit, private equity and real estate. Ares Alternative Credit targets investments across the capital structure in specialty finance, lender finance, loan portfolios, equipment leasing, structured products, net lease, cash flow streams (royalties, licensing, management fees), fund secondaries and other asset-focused investments. Ares Alternative Credit leverages a broadly skilled and cohesive team of approximately 35 investment professionals as of September 30, 2019.

About ARM

ARM is a specialty finance company focused on bringing financial and risk management solutions to agribusinesses nationwide. ARM brings value to customers via the structuring of short-term financial risk. The Company provides crop production loans to meet working capital needs of producers as well as crop insurance to cover expected levels of production. Loans can be direct to the producer or arranged in conjunction with a local distributor.

Media:
Mendel Communications
Bill Mendel, 212-397-1030
bill@mendelcommunications.com
or
Investors:
Ares Management Corporation
Carl Drake, 800-340-6597
cdrake@aresmgmt.com
or
Priscila Roney, 212-808-1185
proney@aresmgmt.com

Source: Ares Management Corporation