National Post (National Edition)

Agri-tech startup Farmers Edge jumps in trading debut after Canadian IPO.

Winnipeg ag tech firm gains 17.5%

- MARCY NICHOLSON

Agricultur­al technology startup Farmers Edge Inc. jumped 17.5 per cent in its trading debut after raising $125 million in its Canadian initial public offering.

Shares of the Winnipeg-based firm traded at $19.43 at 12:38 p.m. on the Toronto Stock Exchange, above its IPO price of $17 a share. That gives the company a market value of about $791 million, based on about 40.7 million shares outstandin­g. The stock had surged as much as 21 per cent at the start of trading Wednesday to touch $20.50. Farmers Edge closed at $19.98.

Farmers Edge uses technology and artificial intelligen­ce to collect and analyze local weather, soil moisture and satellite data to help growers boost crop yields and farm more efficientl­y. The firm, co-founded in 2005 by Wade Barnes, has turned to public markets as the agricultur­e industry shows heightened interest in using technology to improve outputs, curb greenhouse gas emissions and digitize operations.

“We make those farms data-rich, and that's when you can start putting in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to really develop these tools that the farmers can use,” Barnes said in an interview. “That's really our special sauce.”

Farming is the industry least affected by the digital “disruption” hitting the economy, “but it's our belief it will make the biggest impact,” he said.

The investment banks that managed the sale, led by National Bank of Canada and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, have an option to sell an additional 15 per cent of the offering. That could lift proceeds to as much as $143.8 million. Farmers Edge also sold shares to some directors, officers and employees outside of Canada in a private placement that raised $437,500, according to a Wednesday statement.

Farmers Edge plans to use about $80 million of its proceeds to expand, with a focus on internal growth using existing partnershi­ps. While a “lion's share of growth” will come from within, Barnes didn't rule out takeovers.

“There probably will be some opportunit­ies around acquisitio­ns,” he said. “The ag tech space is a little fluid out there, so if something presents itself I think we'll take a long, hard look at it.”

 ??  ?? Wade Barnes
Wade Barnes

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