Betting the farm - Lim Hong Zhuang

Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
#1
Friday, Aug 23, 2013

The Straits Times

Floods, thugs, wild boars - Singaporean Lim Hong Zhuang has braved them all. On a long drive to Johor, he tells Susan Long why he spurned finance jobs and sank his life savings into becoming a farmer and how he hopes to narrow the rural-urban gap.

AS WE drive past a green tapestry of plantations and farms 1½ hours away from Singapore in Johor, Mr Lim Hong Zhuang suddenly gestures to his right. "Look, this belonged to a Singapore guy who lost RM5 million in two years."

Welcome to the high stakes world of cash crop farming. It is volatile, subject to the vagaries of weather, sunny at times, stormy the next, and plagued by pestilence.
The risks are heightened by the short shelf life of fresh produce and highly variable prices according to the whims of middlemen, market supply and demand.
Into this mix entered Mr Lim, who is out to prove that farming can make big bucks - and improve lives of those in the community too. He was then 23, a third-year Singapore Management University (SMU) student.
He learnt how to speak Malay, clear trees, plough land, raise beds, and prepare seeds for planting. Most of the surrounding Malaysian farmers - decades older than him - gave him a year tops.
He lasted five and counting, living in a zinc-roofed hut with no piped water and no toilet. In that time, he weathered rampaging wild boars and fierce floods that destroyed his crops and parang-wielding squatters who refused to be evicted.
He has been left in the lurch by at least six friends and relatives. They consecutively wanted in because of the high returns on paper, but opted out when confronted with the hardships and pressure by parents and girlfriends to find a stable job.
At his lowest point, he was not above begging other farmers to teach him the tricks of the trade. One pitied him and agreed. <p>It is awkward during Chinese New Year with relatives asking why he is pushing 30 and not yet making money. He is raring to make his mother, in her 60s and who still works 12 hours a day at her salon, proud.
.
.
Across the road, he points out another vegetable farm, raking in millions a year, which has its own three-storey collection point for produce and whose owner lives in a towering villa.

Welcome to the high stakes world of cash crop farming. It is volatile, subject to the vagaries of weather, sunny at times, stormy the next, and plagued by pestilence.

The risks are heightened by the short shelf life of fresh produce and highly variable prices according to the whims of middlemen, market supply and demand.

Into this mix entered Mr Lim, who is out to prove that farming can make big bucks - and improve lives of those in the community too. He was then 23, a third-year Singapore Management University (SMU) student.

At the height of the 2007 commodities inflation, he and a friend started driving to Malaysia to scout for land.

In January 2008, he leased his first plot - the size of 30 football fields - in Kuala Pilah, four hours from Singapore. He pumped in $80,000 of savings and planted scores of Jatropha trees, which produce oil-bearing seeds, hoping to cash in on biofuels.

Fuel prices peaked in June 2008, then tanked with the global financial crisis. Within six months of juggling schoolwork and travelling to Malaysia on weekends, his biofuel dream crashed. Both his partners - a businessman with some agricultural know-how and his friend - bailed out.

Not ready to give up, he started farming vegetables at the end of 2008, hoping to generate cash flow before his capital dried up.

He learnt how to speak Malay, clear trees, plough land, raise beds, and prepare seeds for planting. Most of the surrounding Malaysian farmers - decades older than him - gave him a year tops.

He lasted five and counting, living in a zinc-roofed hut with no piped water and no toilet. In that time, he weathered rampaging wild boars and fierce floods that destroyed his crops and parang-wielding squatters who refused to be evicted.

"I fell flat on my face many times, but I got up and moved on," he says, estimating he has lost RM1 million (S$388,000) of investors' and his own money, thanks to pestilence and inexperience.

Now 29, weather-beaten with ruddy cheeks and calloused hands, he can jumpstart a sputtering truck, repair irrigation pipes and diagnose diseased plants.

He has been left in the lurch by at least six friends and relatives. They consecutively wanted in because of the high returns on paper, but opted out when confronted with the hardships and pressure by parents and girlfriends to find a stable job.

From time to time, his workers - he now has 33 Indonesians, whom he personally recruited, by travelling to Jakarta's outlying villages - bolted too. But he says he clung on to his "bigger vision".

His old schoolmate Alicia Ng, 29, who works in a global asset management firm, says that farming is not just a business but a social mission for him.

"He always felt there were many positive externalities to farming, whether it's creating employment or driving local economies of the rural villages," she relates.

Five years on, he is more convinced than ever that farming builds solid foundations for developing cities and economies. It fills stomachs and provides jobs for rural folk, helping to ease the urban sprawl into cities, which he feels is unsustainable.

After his last partner left, he sank another RM1 million from his earnings and loans from family to lease another farm, one hour from Singapore.

He spurned all advice to find a paying job, convinced of the difference farming can make to the surrounding communities. "If I do make it, the difference I can make is so much larger than if I make it as a bank senior vice-president," is his calculus.

Today, he defines the mission of his company, Goldfields Farming, as growing and delivering safe, healthy fresh produce direct from its farms to consumers in cities, with profits ploughed back to production regions to "secure the lives of those employed in the fields".

Hitting the wall

AFTER a long "accumulation of failures", things started looking up this year. Mr Lim says wryly: "You keep hitting the wall till you're almost dead. Then, one more hit, and the wall finally breaks."

He adds that he has probably finished paying his dues to learn about managing all the variables, from crops, to diseases, to pests, to workers. Along the way, he brushed up on his Mandarin to read the latest Taiwanese farming research. He studied Israeli irrigation methods. He explored vertical farming, automated irrigation and agricultural robotics. He even invested in a high-speed organic compost processing machine.

In his desperation, he broke into other farms to spy how they did it. At his lowest point, he was not above begging other farmers to teach him the tricks of the trade. One pitied him and agreed.

"I had no face left to lose. My partners had all left. My competitors were waiting for me to go home and take over my land."

Today, his two operating farms in Johor totalling 100 acres (40.5ha) produce about three tonnes of brinjals, guavas, chillies and lady fingers a day.

About a third of his produce makes its way to Singapore markets, the rest is sold in Malaysia.He conservatively estimates the farm makes at least $3,000 in revenue a day now on a 70 per cent profit margin.

By the end of this year, he plans to open a vegetable and fruit retail store in Singapore that will "truly connect the consumer from farm to fork".

He hopes to cut out the middleman and shorten the supply chain by controlling the food source, quality and price himself.

"In an urban setting, many of us do not understand how our food comes to the table, be it meats or vegetables. We don't know who grows our food, how it is processed and the work behind it. I aim to bridge that gap with lower prices wherever I can," he says.

He will set up operations in a 500 sq ft shophouse in Teban Gardens, offering online ordering and delivery to homes direct from his farms.

Taking a leaf from Apple's experiential stores, he has set himself the challenge of branding vegetables - now as generic as they come - by educating consumers on what goes into growing a bale of bak choy.

He plans to have a cooking area in his store, which will sell ready-to-go lunch boxes. He is also working on a mobile app that shows what's growing in his farms weekly, leading to an order tab.

He is trying out an integrated Japanese farming model, where he is growing a bunch of vegetables and rearing free-range chickens.

His mentor Viswa Sadasivan, 54, CEO of Strategic Moves consultancy, notes: "As they say, when you want something badly, the universe will conspire to make it happen... Through sheer self-efficacy, unrelenting zeal, street smartness and a good dose of recklessness, Zhuang will be the change that he wants." New way to compete

BRINGING up the rear in class made the Anglo-Chinese School and St Andrew's Junior College boy explore new ways of competing with smarter kids, where he wouldn't be so disadvantaged.

During SMU school breaks, the only son of a retired naval officer and hairdresser interned at investment banks and brokerages. "I realised going to office in a nice suit and tie wasn't my cup of tea," he says, resolving to do his own thing.

By the time he was 22, he had tried and failed in five start-ups, dealing in Web-hosting, smartphones and MP3 players. "Eventually all failed for various reasons but I packed up the lessons and hoped to apply them some time down the road," he says.

He excelled at his entrepreneurship module at SMU, where he graduated in business and sociology with a merit degree in 2009, at the worst of the financial crisis. He was already knee-deep in mud at his farm then but noted that many of his peers, despite the scarcity of jobs, preferred to wait it out to parlay their good grades for a good MNC job.

Perhaps because of what he has gone through, he bemoans that Singaporeans lack the entrepreneurial, never-say-die spirit of yore.

"Singapore seems to be a very high-end sweatshop where Singaporeans are just very good workers. If we look at the Singapore skyline, compared to Hong Kong, not many of our great skyscrapers are built by private funds. Many are government-linked or enabled. But we really need to guard our economy against global competition with strong, entrepreneurial Singaporean companies that won't just pack up and leave.

"We need to find new means and ways, other than doing terribly well in school, to compete in the global economy with more grit and innovation. Our generation needs more Robert Kuoks, Ho Kwon Pings and Olivia Lums. Or there will be no more stories of that crazy guy who tried to change the world to tell our children."

In his own way, he is trying to show that the path less travelled - though no picnic - is possible and profitable. He is frank that he is betting the farm and going for broke because he hopes to "break out of the middle class".

"I don't want a life of servicing a mortgage. The entrepreneur's earning curve is exponential."

For now, the learning curve remains steep and riddled with potholes. He now lives alone in a rented, cement-floored terrace house near his Johor farm without hot water. He has "zero lifestyle", waking at 6am and sleeping at 10pm - "old man's hours".

He returns to his family's three-room HDB flat in Jurong only once a month in his eight-year-old Subaru Impreza. He saved up to go to Brazil to watch the World Cup next year but spent the money on fertiliser instead.

It is awkward during Chinese New Year with relatives asking why he is pushing 30 and not yet making money. He is raring to make his mother, in her 60s and who still works 12 hours a day at her salon, proud.

"She's my greatest supporter, she believed in me even when nobody did," he gushes. He would love to marry his girlfriend of three years, Stephanie, a preschool teacher in Hong Kong, soon. For once, he wants to eat at one of those swank restaurants at Marina Bay Sands his peers frequent, he sighs. But all that will have to wait.

Meanwhile, he mounts his Eurostar tractor in muddy Crocs, surveying his land. "If I try hard enough and stay in the game long enough, I will eventually succeed," he says with pursed lips.

suelong@sph.com.sg

Lim Hong Zhuang on...

Why he has not given up

"Farming is relatively hard, even for experienced companies with huge resources. Entry barriers are high as it is both capital- and labour-intensive. It's a hands-on job that needs a strong character and a lot of patience. If I stay the course, there's a chance for me to develop both my character and career at the same time."

His worst day ever

"Last Chinese New Year, after paying salaries, I drove back to Singapore and arrived home at midnight. I got a ring at 2.30am from my workers that some thugs were at the farm accusing them of stealing livestock. I had to rush back to Seremban, exhausted, at 4am to resolve the conflict. Just the night before, my then partner had rung me to say he was pulling out of the venture. Double whammy." Vagaries of nature

"During the monsoon season in October, it rained for almost two weeks. The banks of the river broke, (the waters) swept away a bridge I built and flooded the farm. Being a city boy, I had never heard the roaring waters of an angry river. It was terrifying. I was up all night holding onto my dog, hoping the water wouldn't flood the container I slept in. Needless to say, the morning after was spent dealing with the loss of a whole cycle of crops, damaged infrastructure and demoralised workers."

Organic farming

"It's a hippie hoax. Organic farming is very difficult in our equatorial climate where everything, including insects, grows so fast. I actually consider organic as taking a step back because fertilisers and chemicals were invented for good reason. Going organic means taking away these two factors of production and selling for more money."
Reply
#2
You got to admire this guy's guts and confidence. However, he has been lucky to get financial support and partners. Other than that, he is a true entrepreneur.

If he is able to really cut the middleman and brand his product and at the same time offer it at a cheap price, he has made it!

All the good luck to him and hope he succeeds!
Reply
#3
"He has been left in the lurch by at least six friends and relatives. They consecutively wanted in because of the high returns on paper, but opted out when confronted with the hardships and pressure by parents and girlfriends to find a stable job." - same hurdle for full-time investors wannabes.
"... but quitting while you're ahead is not the same as quitting." - Quote from the movie American Gangster
Reply
#4
This guy is really admirable and one of a kind. I hope he will succeed in his business and achieve his dream eventually.
Reply
#5
well, i admire his willingness to strive for his goals. At the same time, it is important to note that strong confidence does not necessarily ALWAYS equate to success. Not that he cant be successful, I just think that the odds are not in his favour.
Reply
#6
Farmers in malaysia have it good can make millions is possible especially if you happen to have a rich neighbor like singapore to feed almost anything that you can grow in msia will be absorbed by singapore. Everything on our dinner plate is imported. The rice from thailand, vegetables meat eggs fruits large part from malaysia and indonesia.

Quote:Organic farming "It's a hippie hoax. Organic farming is very difficult in our equatorial climate where everything, including insects, grows so fast. I actually consider organic as taking a step back because fertilisers and chemicals were invented for good reason. Going organic means taking away these two factors of production and selling for more money."

My relative used to have a farm in jb, dat time marriage failed business failed so packed up and started new life there, did good just growing veg and fruits and supply to wholesalers in Singapore. Later died of nose cancer, they say he got it from breathing in the fumes from spraying crops with insecticide chemicals.
Reply
#7
(05-09-2013, 12:52 PM)safetyfirst Wrote: well, i admire his willingness to strive for his goals. At the same time, it is important to note that strong confidence does not necessarily ALWAYS equate to success. Not that he cant be successful, I just think that the odds are not in his favour.

I like to wish him success too! Smile

he should focus his farm on high value products.. eg, mao shan wang durians.. or cordyceps or japanese mushrooms..

no point wasting his limited resources going against many farms that supplies cheap to GIANT/SHENGSHIONG/NTUC... etc! Tongue
1) Try NOT to LOSE money!
2) Do NOT SELL in BEAR, BUY-BUY-BUY! invest in managements/companies that does the same!
3) CASH in hand is KING in BEAR! 
4) In BULL, SELL-SELL-SELL! 
Reply
#8
He should focus on soursop which happens to be the most sought after fruit - possibly because of reports circulating online extolling its efficacy on treating cancer etc. In fact I can't even come across one after scouring my usual haunts for the past few weeks. Managed to buy some from Chinatown a few months back. The price per kilo averages $10. Came across one giant-sized one going for $13 per kilo and it was immediately bought with nary a second thought by a 'lucky' lady. Well, it's a phenomenon that this fruit is in such high demand now .
Reply
#9
want to know what are historically the best cash crops in the world have to look at what the british were trading in before. An empire founded on trade whereby simple plants were transformed ...




Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)