Australia Agriculture Seen Luring Foreign Buyers on Food Demand

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-10/australia-agriculture-seen-luring-foreign-buyers-on-food-demand.html

September 09, 2014 at 11:40 AM


Overseas investors are expanding their presence in Australia to meet rising demand for food, spurring concern about levels of foreign ownership. While Prime Minister Tony Abbott vowed after his election win last year that the country is open for business, during the campaign he promised to lower the threshold for review of land deals. The government last year blocked the sale of GrainCorp Ltd. (GNC), eastern Australia’s biggest grain handler, to Illinois-based Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.

“The importance of China is really overestimated in terms of where the investment is coming from,” Williams said yesterday at Bloomberg’s “Beyond the Boom: Mining to Dining” seminar in Melbourne. The Chinese are “interested and they’re kicking tires but they’re not doing the transactions. The money is coming from everywhere and not all of it is China-driven.”

Foreign Ownership

About 87.5 percent of agricultural land is Australian owned, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. China may own less than 1 percent of Australian farmland, according to a report by KPMGand the University of Sydney’s China Studies Centre in October 2013.

Saputo Inc. (SAP), Canada’s biggest milk processor, won control of Warrnambool Cheese & Butter Factory Co. this year and Japan’s Sumitomo Corp. gained full control of Emerald Grain. Noble Group Ltd. (NOBL), Glencore Plc and Bunge Ltd. are investing in grain handling and export facilities on Australia’s east coast. Singapore-based Wilmar International Ltd. (WIL) and Thailand’s Mitr Phol Sugar Corp. own Australian sugar assets

“Most of them believe that unless you’ve got physical assets attached to their trading business, in the long run they won’t be sustainable,” said Emerald’s Murray, referring to grain investors. “Most of the buyers of the assets of grain in Australia will invest where it’s sensible.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Phoebe Sedgman in Melbourne atpsedgman2(at)bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4(at)bloomberg.net Jake Lloyd-Smith, Ovais Subhani

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