Breakway Farm In Indiana To Host Virtual Farm Tour

Breakway Farm, located in central Indiana is offering a virtual farm tour and stallion showcase on its Facebook page on Sept. 15 starting at noon EDT.

In operation since 1995, Breakway Farm is the home to some of Indiana's top stallions and is excited to present two new stallions for the 2021 breeding season during its virtual stallion show. The stallion show and virtual farm tour will feature owner Janice Jordan and farm manager Tara Mathias sharing information on their breeding and boarding farm and how breeders can participate in the lucrative Indiana Thoroughbred Breed Development Program.

New stallions Calculator and Charming Kitten will be introduced to potential breeders.

Calculator (In Summation – Back To Basics, by Alphabet Soup) was the winner of the Grade 3 Sham Stakes at Santa Anita in 2015 and Grade 1 placed, who retired with lifetime earnings of more than $694,000. The gray stallion brings new blood and outcrosses to the state of Indiana and its breeding program.

“Calculator is a great addition to our breeding program because he is an outcross to so many mares,” said Mathias, manager of Breakway Farm.

Millionaire Charming Kitten also joined the stallion roster at Breakway Farm in 2020. The 10-year-old son of Kitten's Joy (out of The Wild Again mare Iteration) won or placed in eight graded stakes, including a victory in the G3 W.L. McKnight Handicap and a third-place finish in the 2013 G1 Toyota Blue Grass Stakes, prior to starting in the Kentucky Derby. The breeding of Charming Kitten fits in with the racing program at Indiana Grand Racing & Casino, where more turf racing is being featured.

“Charming Kitten is a good fit,” says Mathias. “We're excited to stand a son of top sire Kitten's Joy in Indiana.”

Other stallions standing at Breakway Farm that will be featured in the virtual stallion show include:

  • Greeley's Conquest (Mr. Greeley – Tipsy Girl)
  • Mondavi (Maria's Mon, – Senate Appointee), sire of 2019 Swifty Sired Stakes winner Marilyn Mongo
  • Skylord (Sky Mesa – Skyscape), sire of 2018 two-time stakes winner It's Just Fate and two-time William Henry Harrison Stakes winner Double Tuff
  • Turbo Compressor (Halo's Image – Dixieland Event)

“We are excited about the 2021 breeding season,” says farm owner Janice Jordan. “So, we welcome everyone to tune into our virtual stallion show and farm tour.”

The virtual stallion show and farm tour starts at noon EDT and can be found at: http://facebook.com/breakwayfarm

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Grade 1 Winner Honor A. P. Retired Due To Injury; To Stand At Lane’s End

Lane's End farm announced today that Honor A. P. will retire from racing and stand the 2021 season at their Versailles farm. The 3-year-old colt retires as a Grade 1 winner and the top earner of his leading second-crop sire Honor Code.

In his most recent start, Honor A. P. dealt with an unlucky trip to finish a quickening fourth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby, posting a 99 Beyer and traveling an incredible 49 more feet than the winner Authentic. This in turn means that the colt ran the fastest race of the field when accounting for ground loss.

“Honor A. P. is a horse with an immense talent,” said trainer John Shirreffs. “He was so forward and precocious that he broke his maiden second time out by over five lengths going two turns. Honor A. P. showed brilliance as a 2-year-old from the first time I saw him train and replicated it as a 3-year-old defeating the future Kentucky Derby winner. He ran a super race in the Derby and we later found that he came out of the race with an injury, so all things considered, what he accomplished was something special.”

As a 2-year-old, Honor A. P. broke his maiden at Santa Anita by over five lengths posting a 91 Beyer, one of the highest of his generation. His first start as a 3-year-old was in graded stakes company when he finished second in the G2 San Felipe Stakes. In his next start, he won the G1 Santa Anita Derby posting a 102 Beyer, becoming the only horse to defeat subsequent Kentucky Derby winner Authentic while also defeating G2 Pat Day Mile Stakes winner Rushie. The G1 Santa Anita Derby has long produced breed-shaping sires with past winners including A.P. Indy, Sunday Silence, Affirmed, Pioneerof the Nile and more. In his next start, the Shared Belief Stakes, he posted another 102 Beyer making him one of four 3-year-old colts in 2020 to post multiple triple-digit Beyers beyond a mile.

“Honor A. P. was a 'wow' horse from the beginning. He was the highest priced yearling in Honor Code's first crop. He was a standout 2-year-old at April Mayberry's, and the most recognizable horse in training at Santa Anita,” said Bill Farish. “His stunning good looks paired with his obvious talent make him just the type of prospect we are looking for at Lane's End.”

Honor A. P. is out of the multiple Grade 1 winner Hollywood Story, who earned $1,171,105 in her career and he is a half-sibling to three black-type winners. Hollywood Story is by Wild Rush, making Honor A. P.'s pedigree free of Mr. Prospector on his dam's side to five generations. His sire Honor Code is one of just four second-crop sires including Liam's Map and Constitution to produce a Grade 1 winner in 2020. To date, Honor A. P. is Honor Code's highest priced yearling commanding a final bid of $850,000 from David Ingordo for Lee and Susan Searing's CRK Stable at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale.

“Like any owner in this game, Susan and I have long dreamt about having a leading Derby contender,” said Lee Searing. “Honor A. P. has given us the journey of a lifetime and we are excited to stay involved in his next career as a stallion where we know he'll be in great hands at Lane's End.”

Honor A. P. will be available for inspection at Lane's End farm in the coming weeks and a stud fee will be determined.

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Honor Roll Presented By The Runhappy Meet At Kentucky Downs: Ms Bad Behavior Has Been All Good For Hubbard

With offspring like One Bad Boy and Ms Bad Behavior, it would be easy to assume that trouble runs in the family of the Stormy Atlantic mare Cumulonimble.

Far from it.

One Bad Boy, the younger of the two half-siblings – both of whom were foaled in Ontario – was a $65,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase by bloodstock agent Brooke Hubbard on behalf of Sayjay Racing in 2017. The Twirling Candy colt traveled north of the border to win last year's Queen's Plate, the most important horse race for Canadian-breds. Through seven career starts, One Bad Boy has earned $556,732.

Hubbard had some inside information while shopping at Keeneland in 2017. One Bad Boy's older half-sister by Blame, Ms Bad Behavior, showed promise in a pair of 2-year-old maiden races in California for trainer Richard Baltas just before the September auction. She had purchased him for Sayjay and Greg Hall for $75,000 at the 2016 Keeneland September Sale.

Ms Bad Behavior would go on fulfill that promise in an 18-race career that would include four wins, seven seconds and three third-place finishes over three seasons. She would retire with earnings of $502,251.

Foremost among the wins was her lone graded stakes victory in 2019 at 7-1 odds in the Grade 3 Three Chimneys Ladies Turf Stakes at Kentucky Downs. Ridden by Jose Ortiz, Ms Bad Behavior controlled the pace, drawing off late to defeat 11-10 favorite Mitchell Road by 1 1/2 lengths.

Even though she didn't qualify for Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund purse enhancements, the Ladies Turf Stakes win was worth $180,420, her richest payday.

Both One Bad Boy and Ms Bad Behavior were trained in Southern California by Richard Baltas and raced for the partnership of Sayjay Racing, Greg Hall and Brooke Hubbard.

One Bay Boy remains in training: he finished fourth Aug. 29 in a Del Mar allowance race, his first start since running third in the Canadian Triple Crown's middle leg, the Prince of Wales Stakes at Fort Erie on July 23, 2019.

Ms Bad Behavior was entered in Fasig-Tipton Kentucky's November Sale last year, bringing a final bid of $600,000 from Australia-based Freyer Bloodstock.

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What The Shrinking Pool Of Equine Lending Can Tell Us About The Bloodstock Industry’s Present And Future

Even as the results rolled in from auctions trumpeting record returns over the past half-decade, it would be hard to find anyone to proclaim the current commercial Thoroughbred marketplace is the same one that reached the dizzying heights of the 1980s, or even the mid-2000s.

One of the clearest indicators of that fact is how drastically the amount of money that's currently out on equine loans has diminished, along with the number of banks that offer them. Though the market has clawed its way back since the crash of the late 2000s, the fact that there are only a small handful of banks left that offer equine loans suggest that segment of the marketplace has not filled out as much as it may seem.

“Lending against horseflesh is definitely down from 2008 and we are unlikely to see that level again,” said Peter Costich, who handles equine lending for Limestone Bank in Lexington, Ky. “Equine loans totaled around $1 billion at that time. We estimate today's total is less than half of that.”

Equine loans can be taken out in three major areas: Loans on the plant, which consists primarily of property loans on farms; loans on equipment, in this case the horses themselves; and loans on operation, with a scope that includes stud fees.

For many horsepeople in Central Kentucky, business doesn't get started without a loan, so lending activity can provide a forecast of what the coming few years of industry activity might look like.

In the short term, the global economy is still trying to figure itself out due to COVID-19, and the racing industry will have some hard questions to ask about its business model if fans – and their live handle – remain out of the grandstands for an extended period of time. Despite this, equine lending activity has rolled on almost unchanged in 2020.

The long-range forecast paints a different picture. Though the uncertainties surrounding COVID-19 may not have immediately affected the bloodstock economy in terms of loan money taken out, Bob Feenick of Farmers National Bank said the ever-polarizing returns of recent years have threatened to catch up with the industry, and market instability elsewhere in the Thoroughbred business and the world at large, might speed up that chase.

“The last few years, we've seen the polarization in the marketplace – a supply and demand problem is what I call it – and how it sorts itself out,” he said. “I think the target for my customers has been getting narrower for the last few years. Even though the numbers get higher, the cost behind it gets higher and the people participating in those good returns has gotten narrower.”

This is important on two fronts. First, the potential clash between supply and demand comes at a time when the North American foal crop is at its lowest point since the 1960s. When the downturn of the late 1980s occurred, the foal crop was at record highs of over 50,000 per year. During the market crash of the late 2000s, that number was still around 30,000. Today, the North American foal crop will be hard-pressed to reach 20,000.

There are fewer foals being born, and in turn, fewer players in the game needing loans to get their initiatives off the ground. Because that group is smaller, Costich said the number of banks devoting resources to equine lending has also withered.

“I would attribute this to banks no longer having expertise in the business,” he said. “The larger institutions are less willing to invest the time and resources equine lending requires. Over time, for one reason or another, they've exited the business.

Second, the polarizing marketplace has made commercial Thoroughbred breeding more of a “high-risk, high-reward” endeavor than ever. Record averages have driven up stud fees, which then require the ensuing foals to meet or exceed those lofty initial price tags to cover costs or profit.

Because the target has gotten smaller to make money in the commercial market, much less pay off loans, Feenick said Farmers has concentrated on shorter-term loans over the past few years, and lending on smaller percentages of value to lower the risk of default by the borrower.

“Our parameters usually have been pretty much the industry standard that we'll lend up to 50 percent on value,” he said. “I'll tell you if I have anybody that's up near that right now, they'll probably come up short, come fall.

“I'm hoping that we've been vigilant enough in that area, and my clients have worked with me, that they should be able to come with Plans B and C, should the market come up with a significant change,” Feenick continued.

If the market were on an upward trend, and demand were still catching up with the supply, as it was in 2012 and 2013, Feenick said he would not be as concerned about the commercial breeding industry weathering a potential blow like COVID-19 and all of its complications. However, in a market already teetering on over-cost and overproduction, it might be tougher to find buyers at the price one hoped for beyond the chosen few.

Feenick said the long-term nature of the Thoroughbred breeding market means it'll be a slow ship to turn around, as it has been in the past.

“The market will always over-correct,” he said. “We can't correct the market in production and stud fee for another three years, no matter what happens in September. If the market starts to climb back up after that, the next couple crops are going to be cheaper and smaller. It will always over-correct because it has to predict three years out when it comes to breeding. If the market starts to climb up, production and cost are going to take a few years to catch up, and that's where we've been the last couple years – production and costs have caught up.”

No matter what happens this year, the next, or beyond, the market has always been cyclical by nature. Both Feenick and Costich said the operations that stick around are the ones that prepare themselves for the drought when it's raining.

“We've seen our share of sales toppers as well as disappointments, which helps us avoid overreacting to any one particular sale or year,” Costich said. “COVID-19 is simply one of those variables that no one saw coming. The solid operators figured out how to manage their unique set of circumstances and are making their way through it.”

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