Bet to win.
Ffos Las 1.0 Memphis Bell – win bet.
Bet to win.
Ffos Las 1.0 Memphis Bell – win bet.
An established Kentucky bank is emerging as a new player in the equine lending sector. Independence Bank, a primarily commercial institution with a large footprint in the western part of the state and an asset portfolio that emphasizes agriculture, expanded into Louisville in 2016 and just this fall hired the Lexington-based Ted Berge, who has three decades of Thoroughbred-specific banking experience, to be its director of equine services.
“When you think about equine lending and you talk to anybody in the industry, Ted Berge’s name comes up first,” Louis Straub II, the Louisville market president of Independence Bank, told TDN in a recent conference-call interview. “So if we are going to build a specialty and help the industry, we’re going to have the best. You need the best in order to succeed. With Ted’s availability, that made us decide that it was time to enter into the industry.”
Berge, who was raised in central Kentucky and initially got involved with the Thoroughbred business as a transactional attorney, transitioned to banking in the late 1980s. His interest in the sport and his personal experience as a farm owner have not only helped him carve out a niche as a go-to banker who understands the specialized capital needs of horse business owners, but those twin equine passions also serve as the basis for why Berge wants to provide financial services to the Thoroughbred community.
“No offense, Louis, but I don’t know if I could be a banker if it wasn’t for the horse business,” Berge said in the same conference call. “I really like the business. Kentucky’s horse country is beautiful. The people are interesting and diverse. International owners come from everywhere.”
Yet despite Kentucky’s being the epicenter of Thoroughbred breeding for North America–with a billion dollar-auction market, hundreds of horse farms, five commercial racetracks, a dizzying array of daily private bloodstock transactions, and a wide supporting structure of related businesses that include hospitality, veterinary, and feed services–the state is considered, within banking circles, to be somewhat underserved by commercial lenders.
“Right now there are primarily four,” Berge said. “Independence Bank, Limestone Bank, Farmers National Bank of Danville, and Chase. There are others that handle horse operations accounts and do farm mortgages. But specifically, on ones that will utilize Thoroughbred bloodstock as collateral, there are very few.
“It’s really a business of client selection,” Berge explained from the lender’s point of view. “You need to make sure you’re getting people who have good operations, that they’re otherwise well-capitalized, that they plan well, and that their business model makes sense. And to some extent, that takes having been around [the horse industry] for a long, long time.”
Berge has been around long enough to candidly admit that given the current uncertainty of the economy because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s a curious time for any bank to decide to enter the sometimes-risky equine lending sector.
In his 30-plus years as a horse biz point person for various banks (he just finished a 12-year run with a major player in equine lending but said non-disclosure obligations keep him from discussing specifics about that job), Berge has a solid working knowledge of when banks find the Thoroughbred industry attractive and when they decide (or are forced) to exit it.
Historically, Berge said, banks get in at the top of the market when business is booming, like in the 1980s or the pre-recession 2000s. “They kind of buy high and sell low,” he said.
But starting an equine lending program when the marketplace isn’t so robust can be a unique opportunity for a bank, Berge said.
For starters, Berge explained, banks are usually keen to perform due-diligence “stress testing” to try and prognosticate what might happen when markets turn downward. But right now, he said, “this is a time when this won’t be a test. This will be the real thing.” So if Independence Bank acts prudently in its initial wading into equine lending, it could be well-positioned for when boom times cycle back.
With that in mind, Berge said he will be on the lookout for clients who have a track record of weathering down-market conditions.
“There are some real opportunistic asset acquisitions you can do when other operations are having to sell things because they have to,” Berge said. “The really good horse operations are ones that tend to buy in all markets. We certainly don’t want them to not buy in a market [just because it’s] down.”
But when it comes to pinning etched-in-stone values on equine assets that get used as collateral, Berge is emphatic in underscoring that’s not his primary role as a banker. Nor, he cautioned, should it be the role of any financial institution that is serious about excelling in Thoroughbred-related lending.
“Banks that have gotten into it and made mistakes have been ones that, in my observations, depended a little bit too much on ‘We can do this because we know how much these horses are worth,'” Berge said. “I will tell you this: I’ve been around the horse business for a long time, and nobody is asking me to tell them what horses are worth. There are other people who are good at that. I know a little, but I know enough to know I don’t know enough.
“So if you start thinking of it as asset-based lending, and horses are always going to be worth a certain amount, then you can make mistakes,” Berge said. “And once you make those mistakes, it makes this business look very difficult.”
There are other specialty challenges to equine lending, Berge said. The two primary ones are that the collateral base turns over a lot, and that the revenue stream of commercial breeders is extremely seasonal.
Those parameters, Berge said, apply to the two main categories of clients that equine lenders serve: Commercial breeders and stallion owners, and also owner-breeders who do some occasional selling but are primarily involved in racing, with the goal of producing an increasingly valuable pool of assets.
For commercial breeding clients, Berge said, lines of credit can help with seasonal cash flow fluctuations. Term loans are available for asset purchases, which include buying stallions, increasing broodmare bands, and making farm purchases or improvements to existing properties.
Berge said prudent equine lenders don’t select clients based solely on the size of the operation.
“Obviously, [a lender] would like large, successful, well-capitalized clients,” Berge said. “But we’re not going to shy away from smaller ones if they make sense economically and [have shown] part-performance abilities. But it’s a tough business to get start-up capital for–most businesses are.”
That’s because “if somebody is going to get into the horse business and plans on fully leveraging their breeding stock purchases, they’re not going to be able to respond to a market like the one we’re seeing [now],” Berge said. “The great thing about leverage is it sometimes allows you to increase profits because you’re able to buy more productive assets, and those assets produce revenues. But [an opposite effect] can happen in a down market. It tends to exaggerate losses.”
Straub said that while Independence Bank is new to equine lending, the Owensboro-headquartered bank has ample experience serving Kentucky’s agricultural base. He said in the past 25 years, Independence Bank has grown from the fifth-smallest bank in the state ($25 million in assets) to the fifth largest ($2.8 billion in assets).
“And that’s all organic growth,” Straub said. “We have never merged with anybody. That’s all based upon client service. According the American Bankers Association, the last ranking they did in 2018, we were the fourth most financially sound bank in the United States of America in the community bank space.”
Straub said he’s known Berge for years, from when they both worked at another bank together.
When Straub heard Berge was leaving that previous employer, “I got together with our management team, and we saw the real need for another Kentucky-based bank to really support the Thoroughbred industry. Equine is too important of an industry for the state of Kentucky to not be supported by Kentucky banks. Given our history and our specialty in the agriculture segment, we thought that the equine industry could fit in perfectly with what we do.”
Berge said he has continued to monitor Kentucky’s equine marketplace during his transition this autumn to Independence Bank. But he admitted that no matter how close any banker is to the Thoroughbred industry, the pandemic has made it difficult to get a true near-term picture of its economic direction.
“Exactly how this is going to impact the Thoroughbred market going forward is really difficult to tell. It’s a disease-driven change in the economy,” Berge said. “In some ways, it was really encouraging the way the sales went, all things considered. It was a little surprising that the first two [Keeneland September yearling] books suffered as much as they did [because] high-quality assets tend to hold their values longer. But that may have had something to do with the lack of [high-spending] principals being able to show up at the sales; they tend to drive those high-dollar purchases.
“There is clearly a lot of disruption in the world of the horse business, from racing to how sales are conducted, and even the sales that were canceled,” Berge summed up. “But disruption can be an opportunity if you’re willing to step in and seize those opportunities when they pop up.”
The post New Player Emerges in Kentucky’s Equine Lending Sector appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
3rd-Belmont, $67,900, Alw (C), Opt. Clm ($80,000), 10-17, 3yo/up, 1m, 1:33.93, my, 1 3/4 lengths.
PERFORMER (c, 4, Speightstown–Protesting {GSP, $213,050}, by A.P. Indy) made light work of his first start since taking the GIII Discovery S. last November, galloping home as easy as you please in a one-mile Belmont allowance Saturday afternoon. Quickly into stride beneath Joel Rosario, the attractive chestnut colt raced a touch keenly from third while hugging the rail through solid opening splits. Rosario decided he could wait no longer rounding the turn and allowed the 3-10 chalk to accelerate to the inside of pacesetting Musical Heart (Maclean’s Music) and the pair hit the front with three furlongs to race. With his rider hard against him and with his ears flopping back and forth, Performer held Musical Heart at a safe distance before being allowed to run just a touch through the final half-furlong. The winning margin was a measured 1 3/4 lengths. Winner of two of his first three trips to the post racing solely for the Phippses, Performer had a new part-owner in the form of Claiborne when strolling home the 1 3/4-length winner of an 8 1/2-furlong allowance locally last Sept. 29. Trying two turns for the first time in the Discovery, Performer pressed a moderate early pace, raced to the front a furlong from home and had 3/4 of a length on Tax (Arch) at the wire. “I was excited about it, but I was a little nervous about it as the morning went on,” trained Shug McGaughey told NYRA’s Maggie Wolfendale after the race. “He’d been training well. It’s been a go-and-stop year. He was going to run in the [GI] Carter [H.] on Wood day and then he was going to run in the Carter on June 6, but we had to stop him and take care of some things. I was very, very pleased with what I saw.” After inclement weather earlier in the week forced the postponement of Performer’s final pre-race work, McGaughey breezed him a more sedate half-mile in :49 1/5 just two days prior. “It probably would have been more the first of the week and probably a little more solid, but I have done that in the past,” the Hall of Famer said when asked by Wolfendale if a work that close to a race is typical for him. “Sometimes I think it’s good for horses, kind of brush them up a little bit. When you do it, you hope they come out of it good and he did.” McGaughey said Performer could make his next start in the $250,000 GI Cigar Mile H. at Aqueduct Dec. 5. “If he comes out of [Saturday’s race] good, that’s what our plans are. Hopefully we can have a 5-year-old year with him. That wasn’t originally our plan, but when we got curtailed with the COVID stuff, that’s a good possibility.” Protesting, runner-up in the 2009 GII Demoiselle S., is also the dam of Breaking the Rules (War Front), SW & GSP, $333,127, the morning-line favorite for Sunday’s GII Knickerbocker S., and is herself a daughter of GSP On Parade (Storm Cat). The latter, a full-sister to champion Storm Flag Flying, is responsible for GSW Parading (Pulpit). Performer’s third dam is undefeated Personal Ensign (Private Account)’s daughter My Flag (Easy Goer), who counted the 1995 GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies among her four top-level scores. Protesting was most recently bred to Runhappy. Lifetime Record: GSW, 6-5-0-1, $295,500. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.
O-Phipps Stable & Claiborne Farm; B-Phipps Stable (KY); T-Claude R McGaughey III.
The post Performer Returns Running at Belmont appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.
It might not have been a popular choice, or even a consideration for most at the time, but Mel Lawson knew it would be a perfect fit.
As a horseman with a well-earned and well-deserved reputation as one of Canada's most successful owner-breeders, the man with a stable chock full of Thoroughbred stars had a decision to make back in the early to mid 1980s, one that would be a game changer for his Jim Dandy Stable.
There was no shortage of trainers that Lawson could opt for – seasoned veterans of the sport, up-and-coming talents, diamond-in-the rough sorts – to lead his string of horses.
The man who had led the Hamilton Wildcats to Grey Cup gridiron glory in 1943 didn't have to call an audible when he named Janet Bedford to campaign his stable.
For Jim Lawson, Mel's son, and CEO of Woodbine Entertainment Group, the decision, in retrospect, was audacious, but undoubtedly the right one to make.
“It's interesting now when I look back and think about it… maybe it's in light of what has happened in recent months in the media regarding the focus on diversity. Hats off to my dad when I think of the times 40 years ago when he decided he wanted a woman trainer in a backstretch that was completely dominated by men. Janet had worked for [Canadian Hall of Fame trainer] Ted Mann, and I think my dad just felt she knew the horses, and he had confidence in her.”
It's one of many memories he has of Bedford, who recently passed away.
“Now that I think of it, 40 years later, it was probably a bold move. I didn't think of it that way at the time. I'm not sure whether he did, but looking back to those days, I think he saw her as very capable, trustworthy around the horses, and certainly knew them well. It was a natural thing for him to do. I don't think many of the owners at the time with good horses – and he had good horses – would have done that. I don't know. It's very interesting to look back on that now. I now look back and say, 'Wow… that was a good thing.' She definitely deserved it.”
The elder Lawson, inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2010, saw Bedford as an ideal orchestrator for horses like Let's Go Blue and Eternal Search, a dynamic Jim Dandy duo that had stamped themselves as bona fide talents.
Let's Go Blue, a son of Bob's Dusty who won the 1984 Plate Trial and finished second in the Queen's Plate that same year, went on to win Alberta's Canadian Derby and Hastings Racecourse's Grade 3 BC Derby. As a four-year-old, he took the Grade 3 Dominion Day and the Speed to Spare at Northlands, a race he won again in 1986 along with the Fair Play Stakes. He was also third in the Stuyvesant (G2) at Aqueduct before he was retired with over $750,000 (US) in purse earnings.
Up until the 1984 Queen's Plate, there had only been two women trainers to saddle a horse in the iconic Canadian race; Estelle Giddings, widow of Henry Giddings, an eight-time Plate winner, briefly took over the reins of her husband's stable and had a starter in 1950, while Olive Armstrong sent out a starter three years later.
Eternal Search, Mel's brilliant three-time Sovereign Award winning mare of 15 stakes races, came to Bedford's barn in 1983 and went on to win the Nassau Stakes at Fort Erie. The Eternal Search Stakes is run annually at Woodbine.
“We had a chance to travel with Let's Go Blue a few times and Eternal Search as well,” Jim recalled. “That's when you could see how much Janet doted and how much she cared for her horses. I think she probably loved Eternal Search more than anything.”
Interestingly, it's not winner's circle trips that first come to mind for Jim when speaking of Bedford's training exploits.
“First and foremost, it was her love for the animal, a true love for horses, that stands out for me. That is the thing that first comes to mind in my memory of her. When she'd go away with the horses, she'd pretty much want to sleep right beside them. She was just so passionate in caring for her horses. I think somehow there's an intangible there. When someone cares about their horses – rubs them like that, walks them like that – you know they are under the best of care. At some level, I think that's important to a horse, that they know they are so cared for.”
The end results for the multiple stakes winning trainer were 193 career wins and $4.6 million in purse earnings.
Beyond those numbers, however, is a far more significant stamp Bedford has left on Thoroughbred racing, especially at Woodbine Racetrack.
It's something Jim, and many others, are appreciative of.
“We have a very disproportionate number of very capable, very successful women trainers at Woodbine compared to other racetracks around the world. There are so many names at Woodbine, so I won't try to list them all. I think in order for that to happen, there needed to be a pathway. There are a lot of women that work in the Woodbine backstretch, and to have someone who would pave the way like that, and say, 'You can do it,' is a credit to Janet. I think, in part, she has helped Woodbine foster so many great women trainers. It's a very nice thing for our industry, and a very nice thing to acknowledge Janet for having some of the credit for that.”
Catherine Day Phillips, Josie Carroll, Barbara Minshall and Gail Cox are some of the numerous Woodbine-based female conditioners who have experienced success at home and on the world stage over the past 30-plus years.
A multiple graded stakes winner, Day Phillips, whose stars include Grade 1 champion Jambalaya, and graded stakes victors A Bit O'Gold, and Mr Havercamp, is thankful for Bedford and the others who helped open the gates for women trainers.
“My first thought of Janet is her association with Let's Go Blue,” said Day Phillips, whose mother Dinny Day was also a successful trainer. “She was one of the first female trainers I remember, and she was a pioneer in that way. She helped pave the way for female trainers, especially for those of us at Woodbine.”
Around four or five years ago, while he was cleaning his parents' house, Jim came across a piece of nostalgia from the halcyon days of Jim Dandy Stable.
The moment he stumbled upon it, he thought of Bedford.
“I hadn't seen Janet in a while. It was probably four or five years ago, when I was cleaning out my parents' house, and I found an old Jim Dandy Stable jacket. Janet was walking hots for Sid [trainer, Attard] and I took that jacket – which looked pretty much brand new – to her. It was in my dad's closet and it had never been cleaned out. He died in 2011, so this was around 2015 or 2016. I took it to Janet and she nearly burst into tears. It was indicative of how much that era of training meant to her.”
And just as she was in her role as Mel Lawson's trainer, the jacket was a perfect fit.
“She proved herself, loved the horses and took care of them,” said Jim. “I think that's what my dad saw in her.”
The post Woodbine’s Lawson Honors Legacy Of Late Trainer Janet Bedford appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.