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NextGen Energy Board Meeting Lending Observations Jim Jones August 30, 2007.

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Presentation on theme: "NextGen Energy Board Meeting Lending Observations Jim Jones August 30, 2007."— Presentation transcript:

1 NextGen Energy Board Meeting Lending Observations Jim Jones August 30, 2007

2 Overview  Farm Credit System – Ethanol Background  Sources of Debt Capital  Underwriting Considerations

3  Comprised of 18 Farm Credit Associations that provide financial products to agricultural producers and agricultural related business within 15 states (See map)  $49.6 billion in assets  Wells Fargo $415.8 billion  US Bank $205.9 billion  Farm Credit System (inc. AgriBank) $130.0 billion AgriBank Overview

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5 Ethanol Industry (Data as of 7/31/07)  Industry Capacity  114 plants  6.5 bgy capacity  AgriBank District helped finance 58 projects (52% of capacity)  Under Construction or Development  87 new construction / 11 Expansion Projects  7.4 bgy of capacity  AgriBank District has commitments to 57 plants (58% of capacity)

6 Farm Credit System Ethanol Portfolio (as of June 30, 2007) AgriBank District: $1.7 billion Other Farm Credit System Lenders: $1.8 billion* Total System Ethanol Commitments: $3.5 billion * Includes Farmer Mac commitments and guarantees

7 Current Sources of Debt  Farm Credit System (since 1992)  Provided approximately 2/3’s of debt capital prior to 2005  Commercial Banks: First National Bank of Omaha, Home Federal Savings & Loan, Community Banks  Insurance Companies  Foreign Banks: West LB, Society Generale

8 Future Sources of Debt  Issues  Farm Credit is Full: little remaining loan capacity to finance additional ethanol projects unless existing volume is paid down rapidly. (Hold Limits)  Blender Wall: Rate of growth exceeding blender capacity results in: Ethanol priced at variable cost of production. Idling of ethanol plants. Portfolio stress and slow rate of debt pay down. Reduced industry enthusiasm and capital investment.

9 Why the concern about Blender Wall? Since MTBE has been replaced Ethanol demand has been relatively flat.

10 Source: Houston BioFuels Consultants

11 If Supply out paces demand…  Price of ethanol will drop to incent more blending capacity and/or less capacity utilization until equilibrium is satisfied  Contribution Margin = net revenues less variable costs (corn, utilities, chemicals)  Contribution Margin is the signal to producers on whether to vary production rate or stop production  In oversupplied commoditized markets, pricing typically reverts to a variable cost-plus basis. A value- added basis (gasoline related) only arises when negotiating leverage is more balanced between buyers and sellers.  Variable Costs = cash costs incurred to produce an incremental amount of product.

12 Underwriting Guidelines Historical – Dry Mill Plant  Equity: 50% for start up/ 40% existing  Mitigators: Experienced Management/ Construction Cash Sweeps/ Retention of Earnings Debt per gallon (less than $0.90)  Working Capital: 5% of sales or $0.15 /gallon  Repayment Capacity: 115% (Net income + Interest + Depreciation divided by Principal + Interest + Capital Expenditure + Dividends)  Limitations on Dividends  Loan Term: 7 to 10 years (May include cash sweeps to reduce debt faster)  Feasibility Study: Corn procurement, marketing, permitting, rail access, infrastructure, technology, etc.

13 Underwriting Guidelines Cellulosic Ethanol: No current guidelines but…  Similar to Dry Mill Ethanol Plant with following  Equity: 50%  Working Capital: 10% to 15% of sales  Repayment Capacity: 115%  Dividend Limitations  Cash Sweep Provisions  Loan term 7 to 10 years

14 Underwriting Guidelines  Other Considerations  Scale of project: Larger or smaller than today’s ethanol plants  Experienced Contractor  Reliable Technology – low cost operation  Feedstock Availability/Procurement  Federal Subsidies/Mandates and term of programs.  Loan Guaranty – to mitigate technology and start up risks  Purchase Agreements (Tolling)

15 Federal Incentives Lenders Perspective  Federal Incentives (CCC production credit, Production credit) are typically not relied upon in the underwriting process.  Federal Subsidies and Mandates: Important but ultimately industry must be financially viable without Federal support to attract lenders. Large Commercial Banks have avoided the industry due to political risk.  Loan Guarantees: Best credit enhancement  Issue: size of guaranty relative to cellulosic projects  Typically do not guaranty lender during construction phase


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