Firm: Black River
Fund: Black River Capital Partners (Food) Fund
Target: $400 million
Amount Raised: $200 million
The proposed
“GDP growth is driving food consumption in emerging markets (and) the demand for safe and high quality food, against a backdrop of outdated production methods and fragmented industry means high margin revenue opportunity for leading players,” Black River said in presentation notes seen by Reuters.
“Recent surveys indicate more than 96 percent of (Chinese) consumers are very concerned about food safety and 75 percent of interviewees expressed a willingness to pay extra for safer food,” it added.
Black River’s Singapore office could not be reached by deadline for comment.
The price of grains and other agricultural commodities have risen in recent months, pushing up inflation in many developing countries and raising concerns about possible food shortages.
The World Bank warned in April that higher global food and energy prices are affecting a larger swath of developing countries than at the beginning of the year, threatening to push more people into poverty.
According to the presentation, Black River is targeting 30 percent gross cumulative return per year for the planned food fund, which has a life of 10 years. It will charge a 17.5 percent performance fee if it achieves a hurdle rate of 8 percent.
Black River’s investment pipeline includes a Chinese pork producer and distributor, a duck farming firm in northern China, a fish producer in Costa Rica and a frozen fish processor in Singapore.
Institutions that have committed money to the food fund include Dutch pension fund
Kevin Lim is a correspondent for Reuters in Singapore.