Commodities

Daiwa Plans Foray Into Australian Farm Loans, Real Estate

A cotton picker harvests a crop at a farm in Goondiwindi, Queensland, Australia, on Thursday, May 16, 2024. Louis Dreyfus Co. and Olam Agri Holdings Ltd. have progressively outbid each other for Namoi Cotton since January. Photographer: Ian Waldie/Bloomberg (Ian Waldie/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Daiwa Securities Group Inc. is eyeing Australia for its first expansion into the agricultural sector abroad, part of a wider push to boost lending and direct investment in the country’s real estate and renewable energy sectors.

Japan’s second-biggest brokerage is looking for investment or lending opportunities in what it considers value-added produce growers, Chief Financial Officer Kotaro Yoshida said. The firm is also targeting loans to mid-sized property developers, filling a market niche between Australia’s four major banks and non-bank lenders. 

The renewed push in Australia comes as Chief Executive Officer Akihiko Ogino seeks to increase income from outside Japan by about 40% in the next few years, and follows an earlier investment by the Tokyo-based firm into the venture capital arm of Australia’s national science agency.

Japan’s long-standing farm labor shortage has encouraged agricultural industrialization, offering a model for similar technological improvements for fresh produce growers in Australia, Yoshida said. The brokerage could make direct investments in these farms or provide loans.

“If they grow and if we can bring them to Japan, that would be a wonderful,” Yoshida said in an interview on Tuesday following Daiwa’s first Japan equities conference in Sydney and Melbourne. They can “collaborate with Japanese companies and grow further.”

The firm wants to continue its focus on lending and advisory in the clean energy space, leveraging its five staff in Sydney and Melbourne, Yoshida said.

Chairman Seiji Nakata told Bloomberg News last year the firm was looking to expand in Australia to take advantage of the country’s strong demographics and fast-growing pension pool.

Through its private investment arm Daiwa PI Partners Co., the firm backed Main Sequence Ventures, the venture capital arm of Australia’s science agency that has funded companies including plant-based meat maker V2 Food.

--With assistance from Takashi Nakamichi.

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Top Videos