Your reading list

Banker likes creative farms

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Published: October 17, 2002

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Farmers need to be creative if they want to be

successful, suggests an American with a financial co-operative.

Paul DeBriyn, president of AgStar Financial Services in Mankato,

Minnesota, said the most successful farmers are often “the ones you

don’t hear about.” He added they are often responsive to change.

He said these farmers are trying to buck the trends or position

themselves beyond a commodity-based business and reduce their

dependence on government programs to assist with their income.

Read Also

A colour-coded map of Canada showing the various plant hardiness zones.

Canada’s plant hardiness zones receive update

The latest update to Canada’s plant hardiness zones and plant hardiness maps was released this summer.

He gave examples of successes achieved by farmers involved with hogs,

dairies and ethanol who have approached his bank with a business plan.

Business plans are critical. DeBriyn said farmers who want to get the

attention and support of banks must have a marketing plan, a contract

or both.

AgStar is a co-operative with 16,000 clients, about 12,000 of them

voting shareholders. Most of its business deals with traditional-sized

farms.

DeBriyn said AgStar staff last year made more than 35,000 farm visits,

providing service “over the kitchen table.”

Among the key challenges for farmers are production volume,

value-adding and market access.

In one area, farmers wanted to improve their position in the market,

the quality of their meat and the profitability of their operations.

In the early 1990s, hundreds of hog farmers in southern Minnesota, Iowa

and South Dakota made a substantial investment into their industry.

They wanted a new hog system and built new facilities.

Nineteen Isowean sow units were built with groups of farmers

financially tied to each. Many of the units were leased, with options

for the farmers to buy them later. Each unit holds 3,000 sows, so a

total of 57,000 sows are now available.

The farmers bought shares in the operation. The barns are

professionally managed and use quality genetics.

The shareholders are provided with 10-pound Isowean pigs, priced at $33

to $40 US.

They finish the animals in their own barns and sell them. Ninety

percent of the production is under a price procurement contract with a

packer.

Individual farmers own the pigs, and DeBriyn said the venture has been

successful.

“This has kept more family farms than any other programs in 21 years,”

he said.

Between 60 and 70 percent of the hogs went to farmers in Minnesota, 20

to 30 percent to Iowa and the rest to South Dakota.

He noted this arrangement helped the hog producers survive and grow

despite the drastic price drop to $8 per hundredweight in the early

1990s. Of the top 30 hog producers in the U.S., six or seven are in

Minnesota, he said, adding that Minnesota has more independent hog

producers than any other state. Few hog farmers involved in the network

were lost during the price crash, while Iowa lost almost 30 percent of

its hog producers.

Having the contract with the packers was important to AgStar.

“We wouldn’t finance a new hog barn if it is not part of a system,” he

said.

Before agreeing to loans, his company wanted to know more about the

unit, the flow of pigs, whether it had proper management, and

especially the market plan.

In this case, AgStar and veterinarians got together and talked to

packers, farmers and others with a stake in the hog barns.

“We were in pretty early. When the farmers banded together, we helped

them put together a financial plan.”

The co-operative served as a consultant, and then helped with financial

services and loans.

“We developed a model and stuck with it.”

A 150-cow dairy herd in southwestern Minnesota decided to target

upper-end grocery stores in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area.

The family-run operation opened in March, and sales have doubled every

month.

The farm promotes that its cows are grass fed on rotational grazing,

and that no hormones are used. Instead of saying organic, the family

plays up the natural image. Between 5,000-7,000 pounds of milk are

processed daily at its on-farm facility.

The family decided to try different products, such as ice cream, soft

cheese and yogurt. Products are marketed through 30 food co-operatives,

and upper-end grocery stores.

Milk is bottled in returnable glass bottles, which the public loved.

One hundred customers are on a delivery route and many more are on a

waiting list.

“They can’t expand fast enough,” DeBriyn said. “There’s a love affair

with glass bottles.”

It’s like turning back history, he added.

The family has been a long-time client and was discouraged about milk

prices.

“They wanted to be closer to retail, but didn’t want a larger herd.

They did primarily all the work” with the business plan, DeBriyn said.

A smaller dairy operation also wanted to be closer to the consumer. A

family with 38 Jersey cows decided to rely on image to market

whole-milk yogurt.

“They created an image in the brand of content Jersey cows in green

pastures with a red barn,” DeBriyn said.

They played up Jersey milk’s quality and sweetness, which DeBriyn said

was attractive and effective.

The family just started the yogurt business this year, with a portion

of its milk production processed in a special yogurt processing

facility on the farm. DeBriyn said there has been good response so far.

“People like the taste of whole milk.”

The family offers eight flavours of yogurt in 18 stores in Wisconsin

and is expected to sell soon in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area.

The husband takes care of production, while the wife is the business

manager.

DeBriyn said the family is optimistic that in the future it may need to

contract other cows to keep up with market needs.

AgStar played a role in helping develop the business plan.

DeBriyn said the United States has 79 ethanol plants with a three

billion gallon capacity, which is expected to reach 4.4 billion gallons

in the next year.

He is optimistic about ethanol and explained why farmers and his

lending co-operative have come on board with ethanol projects.

Ethanol is seen as an additive that enhances gasoline, but more

importantly it adds value to corn grown by farmers.

Farmers buy into an ethanol plant at $2 per bushel of corn. They

receive market prices and added value at the end of the year. While it

depends on public policy and the U.S. energy bill, DeBriyn said ethanol

adds an average of 50 to 75 cents per bushel of corn, or about 25

percent on investment.

Most of Minnesota’s 14 ethanol plants are farmer-owned.

“In Minnesota, 17-20 percent of corn production is going into ethanol.”

The technology has changed dramatically and there are some “very

effective plants out there.”

DeBriyn’s company is financing a number of smaller plants rather than

sinking a lot of money into just one.

About the author

Elaine Shein

Saskatoon newsroom

explore

Stories from our other publications