Laguna Bay Selling Woorndoo Aggregation With Expectations Exceeding $70M

October 7, 2021

photo credit: LAWD

By Lynda Kiernan-Stone, Global AgInvesting Media

Australia’s Laguna Bay, a full service institutional investment management firm specialzing in the agri sector, made headlines in December 2019 when it sold, on behalf of its investors, the largest almond portfolio in Australia to Canadian pension fund giant Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) for over A$350 million (~US$240 million).

In October of last year Laguna once again demonstrated its superior management and timing when it sold Banongill Station to a local consortium of farming families for approximately A$80 million (US$57 million at the time).

These deals were testament to Laguna Bay’s ability to serve institutional investors as well as being significant for the industry. Laguna founder and CEO Tim McGavin highlighted it as an example of how agri assets can produce both very strong cash flows and capital growth for investors when structured well, in an interview he did with GAI News in April 2020

“The best thing we can do for our investors is to stay the course and do what we do best – which is diligently allocate capital to the opportunities that offer the best risk reward,” McGavin told GAI News. 

Today, Laguna Bay is continuing to do what it does best – being savvy in realizing the greatest return on investment – by capitalizing upon record prices and placing its Woorndoo aggregation on the market.  

LAWD and Elders have been called upon to manage the sale of the asset, comprising approximately 3,355 hectares (8,285 acres) across three hubs all located within a six kilometer radius: the Northern Hub (1,092 hectares – 2,698 acres); the Central Hub (842 hectares – 2,080 acres); and the Southern Hub (1,420 hectares – 3,509 acres).

With average annual rainfall of 582 millimeters, extensive drainage, and highly fertile basalt clay loam soils, LAWD stated that Woorndoo is a dryland cropping opportunity of superior quality well-suited to a variety of agricultural production models, from winter cereal crops, oilseeds, or pulses. 

Not only does this particular asset offer a potential buyer an institutional scale holding that benefits from scale, operational efficiency, and near-ideal growing conditions in the sought-after Western District region, but Gavin explained to GAI News in a January 2020 interview how Australian ag, in a broader sense, offers its own range of unique benefits. 

“Australian agriculture is positioned in a unique time in history given our proximity to SE Asia and the demand disruption the world is experiencing in these markets,” said Gavin. “Australia has scale, low costs of production, a competitive advantage in many sectors, no subsidies, and very good farmers producing premium products the world wants more of. We feel that Australia is well placed to capitalise on provenance branding and also to help solve supply chain integrity issues with traceability technology.”

The Woorndoo aggregation includes an all-weather lane system for the movement of heavy machinery and ease of transport, and has multiple road frontages creating enhanced production efficiencies. It also has benefited from extensive development through the amalgamation of diverse mixed farming enterprises, and the addition of state-of-the-art raised bed systems.

The property is being sold either as a whole, or as three separate assets, via an expression of interest campaign due to close on November 4.

For more information interested parties can contact Rob Rickard, with Elders, or Danny Thomas with LAWD. 

 

– Lynda Kiernan-Stone is editor with GAI Media, and is managing editor and daily contributor for Global AgInvesting’s AgInvesting Weekly News and  Agtech Intel News, as well as HighQuest Group’s Oilseed & Grain NewsShe can be reached at lkiernan-stone@globalaginvesting.com

 

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