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Mega quarry land north of Toronto bought by burgeoning farm fund Bonnefield

A controversial plan to build a massive quarry in rolling farmland north of Toronto appears officially dead in the water after a US$20-billion hedge fund in Boston agreed to sell the land on which the project was to be located.

A controversial plan to build a massive quarry in rolling farmland north of Toronto appears officially dead in the water after a US$20-billion hedge fund in Boston agreed to sell the land on which the project was to be located.

By John Greenwood

Published in the Financial Post, July 7, 2013

Staking out a farmland business

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Tom Eisenhauer, president of Bonnefield Financial Inc.
(Deborah Baic/The Globe and Mail)

He hails from an East Coast seafaring family, but Tom Eisenhauer is making his mark as a landlubber these days. The former investment banker and tech investor heads Bonnefield Financial Inc., a new Canadian entry into the rising investment market for agricultural land. Bonnefield expects to close its first fund at year-end, and has amassed a portfolio of 7,000 acres. While the global food-price surge helps his cause, Mr. Eisenhauer insists the payoff is long-term gains for investors and for farmers who lease back land from the fund.

Your family background in Nova Scotia doesn't suggest a future in farmland.

The Eisenhauer family came from Germany primarily as farmers in the 1700s. But they figured: "Farming in Lunenburg County? I think we'll go fishing." And my father was a habitual entrepreneur who was involved in shipbuilding and metal fabrication. So he made the processing equipment for fish plants and things like that. My brother now owns that company and has expanded it. I'm the black sheep because I'm the only male for generations who is not an engineer.

Originally, two Eisenhauer brothers and an uncle came to Nova Scotia in 1753, and arrived too late to set up shop that year. It's said they spent the winter on a ship in Halifax harbour. After that, I believe the uncle and one of the brothers said, "Forget it. I'm out of here," and went to Pennsylvania. There was already a German community there and the family of General Dwight Eisenhower came from those origins. It's spelled a little differently, but back then they probably couldn't spell. It's rumoured the one who stayed behind met a local girl and put down roots in Lunenburg - and that's the Canadian branch.

How did you end up in this business?

Back in 2008 I sold my [technology merchant banking]firm, and timing is everything in life - it was just pre-crash. The obvious thing was starting a new private equity fund, but no one was going to fund private equity in 2008-2009. So I was looking around at other assets.

So what was your eureka moment in farmland?

I do a lot of cycling, and my wife is from the Paris-Brantford area in Ontario. At that time, potash was going through the roof and everything, and I was riding around that area and seeing a bunch of farms for sale.

I thought: If I buy a farm and sit on it until I retire, it can't be a bad investment. That led to three months of research. I had no idea that farmland was such a huge institutional investment class around the world, but not in Canada. Over decades, it's had very steady-Eddie equity-like returns, extremely low volatility, and no correlation to public markets - at a time when markets were going crazy. I thought this is too good not to pursue.

But I realized I was this fishing-community guy from Lunenburg, who might get his head handed to him in farmland. I put the idea on the shelf but within days I had a call from a friend, Jan Kaminski, whose family has the Colonnade real estate group in Ottawa. They'd gone a long way down the road [thinking about land investment and lease-backs to farmers] So we put together Bonnefield Financial.

Is everybody calling you now because farmland prices are soaring?

If I could take money from non-Canadians, I'd be retired by now. But we adhere to farmland-ownership restrictions in Saskatchewan and Manitoba which means all our investors must be individual Canadian citizens.

Farmland leasing is a concept that's been around internationally for generations, but it's so new in Canada. We're getting certainly a lot more phone calls here, but I get four calls from non-Canadians for every one from Canada.

Why are Canadians behind the rest of the world?

We tend to think of agriculture more as social policy rather than agricultural policy. Through the rest of the world, it's the industry of the future because of climate change, water shortage, population growth, food security. But we still have this image of the farm business as being grandpa with a cow and getting by. That's certainly not the kind of Canadian farmers that we're dealing with.

Is there much interest from farmers?

Overwhelming response. But our approach is different: We're not going into these small communities, perusing the MLS listings and buying up farms. If you do that, you make yourself really unpopular in the local Tim Hortons because invariably there's some farmer who's had his eye on that property for years. Then some guy from Bay Street shows up to buy it.

Instead, we've got a whole bunch of metrics to identify farmland that's attractively priced relative to productive capacity. Once we've done that, one of our partners, a former farmer, works through financial advisers and the local Farm Credit Canada guys to find young progressive people who are growth-oriented and we get introduced. Invariably the conversation starts with, "Let's do a sale lease-back on some land that you already own" and doing that cleans up the farmer's balance sheet.

The next conversation is about how they are leasing land from some retired guy down the road. With the amount invested in operations and equipment, if they lose access to that land, they're screwed. They come to us and say, "I'm afraid the owner is going to retire and sell the land to someone else, so I'll get you involved, and you buy it from him." Then they'll lease it from us on a long-term basis. It's the farmer leading us to the land, and not vice versa.

A farmer in Iowa just sold his place for $11,000 (U.S.) an acre. Does that high price scare you?

We look at what the farm can earn. As former techies, we were frustrated that we couldn't find any third-party computer models to help us assess the market, so we made our own. We bought a GIS map of Canada and layered into it a land map that tells us what soil predominates where, as well as climatic data, production data, yield data. It allows us to compare regions and find out where land at similar productive capacity is trading at a discount.

We put together what we call the Bonnefield indexes, which go right down to the municipality level. Then we came up with what amounts to a price-earnings ratio for farmland. We layer that information onto our GIS map, and areas identified in green, for example, look pretty attractive.

And what's the outlook for ownership deregulation?

There are not many other businesses where your only financing options are sweat equity and bank debt. You can't take in public capital. You can't take in venture capital money. There are no securitized assets. So why can't you just say Canadian farmland should be farmed by Canadians, but does it have to be owned by Canadians? Does there have to be restricted capital?

Behind closed doors, policy-makers understand that. They have a wall of retiring farmers coming at them. We did back-of-the-envelope numbers - not accurate, but in the order of magnitude - estimating that about $53-billion worth of farmland will have to change hands from retiring farmers over the next decade to decade-and-a-half in this country. A lot of that will be intergenerational transfers but what if just 10 per cent has to be financed publicly?

Where do you fit in?

In the last six months I've been approached by two guys on Bay Street, both of whom grew up in the Prairies. Their dads farmed and, according to them, they would have liked to stay on the farm but there was no practical way to do it and earn the return that they wanted. They said, "Look, if I had your access to capital, I'd still be a farmer today." In one case, the guy loved our investment thesis so much, that he went back a few years ago and bought several sections that he now leases out to farmers.

___________________

Tom Eisenhauer

Title: President, Bonnefield Financial Inc., Toronto

Born: Lunenburg, N.S., 49 years old

Education: Bachelor's in economics, Dalhousie University; master's in economics, Queen's University

Career highlights:

* First worked as a federal economist

* Early 1990s: managing director of Lancaster Financial, M&A advisory firm.

* 1995: Lancaster acquired by TD Securities, where he became investment banker.

* 1999: Formed Latitude Partners to invest in tech companies

* 2008: Sold Latitude; joined Bonnefield.

 

By Gordon Pitts

Published in The Globe and Mail, Sept. 10, 2012 (yes the date is correct...2012)

Bonnefield Launches Canada's Largest Farmland Partnership

Acquires 6,500 Acres of Ontario Farmland

OTTAWA, ONTARIO--(Marketwired - July 16, 2013) -

Attn: News Editors.

Bonnefield Financial today announced an initial closing of its third investment partnership, Bonnefield Canadian Farmland LP III ("LP III"). LP III received various commitments totaling $100,000,000 from Canadian investors and more capital may be raised in subsequent closings to a maximum of $200,000,000.

Coincident with the closing of LP III, Bonnefield used a portion of the funding to complete one of the largest farmland transactions in Canadian history, the acquisition from the Highland Companies of over 6,500 acres of farmland located in Dufferin County, Ontario. The high-quality land, predominantly used for potato production, is located in the highlands of the Niagara escarpment a 90-minute drive north of Toronto. With its purchase by LP III, the land will continue to be farmed by local farmers.

"We are pleased to close this transaction with Bonnefield and believe it represents a good outcome for all parties," said John Scherer of Highland.

"The Dufferin County transaction is the realization of a long-held dream, " said Tom Eisenhauer, President of Bonnefield. "Here we have Canadian investors, supporting Canadian farmers to ensure that one of our most precious resources - farmland - continues to be used for farming. That's the core of Bonnefield's mission: farmland for farming. We look forward to working with local farmers who will operate this land on a long-term basis and to ensure that it is preserved and enhanced for farming use."

About Bonnefield

Bonnefield is Canada's only national farmland investment management and property management company. Bonnefield's two previous farmland partnerships, LP I and LP II, have over $50 million in capital that has been deployed to provide land lease financing to farmers across Canada. To date Bonnefield's partnerships have secured approximately 35,000 acres of farmland for farmers located in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick.

Our goal is to protect the integrity of farmland for farmers while increasing its long-term value for investors. We do not operate farms, rather we work with farm operators to help them grow, reduce debt and diversify their assets while promoting good farming practices and wise business choices. We provide individuals, family offices and institutional investors with opportunities to invest in Canadian farmland for long-term capital appreciation and income.

Bonnefield is headquartered in Ottawa, Canada with offices in Toronto.

By Lisa Courtney Lloyd, Bonnefield Financial

Published in the "Wall Street Journal", July 16, 2013

Posted on "Bonnefield" website: http://bonnefield.com/index.php?mact=News,cntnt01,detail,0&cntnt01articleid=34&cntnt01returnid=90

Posted on "Market Wired" website: http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/bonnefield-launches-canadas-largest-farmland-partnership-1811664.htm

Highland sells land in Melancthon, leases it back

NDACT remains focused on Food and Water First campaign

The North Dufferin Agricultural Community Taskforce (NDACT) is taking the sale of The Highland Companies’ land in Melancthon with a grain of salt.

That skepticism will always remain, even if the new outfit says the land will continue to be farmed in the long-term.

“We’re all realists. We know the rock isn’t going anywhere,” said Carl Cosack, chair of NDACT. “We now know what could be done to it. It’ll be up forever and forever, I’m sure.”

On Tuesday (July 16), Bonnefield Financial, a farmland investment and property management company, announced it acquired more than 6,500 acres of land from The Highland Companies.

Highland’s potato growing operation won’t leave anytime soon, however, as it basically sold the land to Bonnefield only to turn around and lease it back.

The land will continue to be used for farming purposes for the foreseeable future, explained Bonnefield vice-president Lisa Courtney Lloyd.

“We’re all about farmland for farming,” she said. “That’s our reason to be. That’s our strategy. To work with local farmers, to help them work the land they want to work.”

The land purchased by Bonnefield holds a close place in many local residents’ hearts. Before it withdrew its application last November, Highland planned on gaining an aggregate licence to mine 2,316 acres for limestone in Melancthon.

Armed with a bounty of environmental concerns, local residents quickly rallied together in fierce opposition to Highland’s plans.

“It has just become increasingly clear that there just isn’t sufficient support to move forward with the approval process,” John Scherer, principal of Highland, told The Banner last November. “We made a business decision, The Highland Companies did, that the right thing to do is to pull the application.”

When asked whether Bonnefield is willing to even consider aggregate extraction, Lloyd outright rejected the premise. The financial company’s investors are solely interested in backing farmland, she said.

“Our job is to make sure that land is always healthy for farming,” Lloyd said. “We certainly don’t purport to tell farmers how to work the land, but … they must agree to promote the sustainability of the land for the long-term.”

That doesn’t mean the land deal won’t raise a few eyebrows in Melancthon. As Cosack explained, NDACT never knows what any new owner might ultimately want to do with the land.

“We don’t ever know these things about any private enterprise,” he said. “We’re just looking forward to the fact the land remains to be farmed, stays productive and does what it’s supposed to do, which is grow food for people.”

Due to confidentially reasons, Lloyd declined to reveal how much Bonnefield paid for the land. Unable to speak to the details, she confirmed Highland has a land lease in place.

Bonnefield targets what Lloyd termed “progressive farm operators” who need large pieces of agricultural land to work without necessarily being tied to ownership. The financial company buys land and leases it back to farmers on a long-term basis.

“There is that farmers live poor, die rich (saying). They live poor, because often they need land … so traditionally what they’ve done is gone and taken out loans,” Lloyd said. “They are realizing they don’t have to own the land on which they work.”

Bonnefield has secured about 35,000 acres of farmland in Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick since its inception in April of 2010. That doesn’t include the recent purchase in Melancthon.

“We’ve been working with investors, investing in land across Canada, and leasing it back on a long-term lease,” Lloyd said. “That’s our model.”

In the meantime, NDACT will continue to focus on lobbying the provincial government to rework the Aggregate Resources Act (ARA) — a provincial review is currently underway. Ensuring agricultural land is adequately protected in Ontario will always be of utmost importance to NDACT, Cosack said.

“We knew it was up for sale,” he said. “Ownership has never really been the crucial part. It has always been with what they do with it.”

By Chris Halliday

Published in the "Orangeville Banner", July 16, 2013

Sorry – not Dufferin 109

ONE THING THE TOWN OF CALEDON and much of Dufferin have in common is suitability for the extraction of massive amounts of aggregates.

But while they have lost countless acres of good farmland to gravel pits, the demand from the construction industry seems insatiable and we’re forever hearing of new proposals to create ever larger pits.

The latest (and perhaps largest) project in Caledon is planned for a 291-acre site northwest of Melville village that was the subject of a public information meeting last week.

There, proponent Olympia Sand and Gravel Inc. is proposing to mine 200 acres of the site for 15 to 20 years, with most of the extraction coming between April and September.

No estimate was given of the number of huge trucks that would be coming and going, but the meeting was told the haul route to Toronto wouldn’t be the shortest possible (south through Melville) but rather north along Porterfield Rd. (Peel 136) to Dufferin 109 and thence south on Highway 10 and through Caledon Village.

We don’t know whether Dufferin County could prohibit such idiocy or even whether it could charge Olympia or Caledon for the damage to the already heavily travelled roadway that should long ago have been taken back by the Province as Highway 9.

But we do know that Dufferin County Council should oppose such a travesty coming to pass, in the strongest possible terms.

Editorial by the Orangeville Citizen

Published in the "Orangeville Citizen", July 4, 2013