The world needs
more food. At least more of the food
produced in the world’s fields needs to end up in the mouths of humans and
their animal friends. According to the
United Nations, the world’s farmers produce enough food to feed everyone, yet
over 800 million people routinely go hungry.
This is due in part to the ancient and ongoing practice of selecting
plants for high yield. The consequence
is a selection of highly homogenous food crops.
There are thousands of edible plants growing on Planet Earth, but only a
dozen crops account for 75% of all human calories. Lack of genetic variability in those twelve
crops means particular vulnerability to pests, disease and climate change.
Human efforts to
control crop pests and diseases are as long-lived as crop selection. For centuries farmers manually picked insects
from food crops, laid out smudge pots to ward off locusts or engulfed nearly
ripened fruit trees in netting. It was
not until the late 1800s that chemicals were applied to crops such as sulfur,
nicotine and arsenic. By the mid-1900s
the chemists appeared to have taken over agriculture, bringing all sorts of
laboratory concoctions such as dichlorodipehnyltrichloreoethane to the field. Otherwise known as DDT, its inventor was awarded
the Nobel Prize for its discovery.
Enthusiasm has since waned as the potion began decimating bird
populations and humans started having seizures and going infertile.
Fortunately, carcinogens
are not the only way to boost crop success and food production. Marrone Bio Innovations (MBII:
Nasdaq) offers bio-based solutions for pest and
disease control. The company has developed
a fairly wide product line, including insecticides and fungicides as well as
seed and soil treatments. The company
has developed proprietary technology to isolate important microorganisms that
can be effective in pest management without collateral damage. Other microorganisms have been found that
help promote plant health and productivity.
In the most
recently reported twelve months ending September 2019, Marrone has claimed
$28.4 million in total sales of its various crop elixirs. Despite a 54% gross margin, the company has
still not delivered an operating profit.
The company is still spending heavily on research and development. In the last twelve months 47 cents out of
every sales dollar went toward new product development. Marrone is also spending heavily on marketing
and sales. That investment is tucked
away in the line of reported SG&A expenses, which represented a
jaw-dropping 95% of revenue in the last year.
In the last twelve months, Marrone reported its deepest operating loss
to day at $25.1 million.
Fortunately, on
a cash basis the news was not so alarming.
In those same twelve months the company used $19.0 million in cash
resources to support operations. Unless
something is done to conserve cash, Marrone may need to raise capital. This is especially important if the company
also uses cash for additional acquisitions, as it did in September 2019 with
the $6.3 million cash purchase of Pro Farm and the Jet-Ag and Jet-Oxide
product lines.
The company had
$7.9 million in cash on its balance sheet at the end of September 2019,
suggesting it could last about five months before it would need a capital
infusion. However, in the capital
markets that is not much time at all, given that it takes about four to six
months to drum up support for a struggling operation.
A trip to the
capital market is made even more difficult if a company gets into a legal dust
up with its investment banker. In April
2019, Marrone was sued by investment banking firm Piper Jaffray for failure to
pay a promised transaction fee related to a private placement. The dispute was resolved with a promise to
pay half the requested fee. Nonetheless,
in the future some bankers may think twice about signing on the help this
company raise capital.
In the midst of
the fee dispute with Piper Jaffray, Marrone adjusted its agreement with warrant
holders. The company was then able to
call in 10 million warrants, raising $10 million in new capital during the
quarter ending September 2019. At that
time there remained 26.6 million warrants outstanding under the warrant
reorganization agreement.
In the past
Marrone has used both debt and equity capital.
Management has also factored various accounts receivable. Capitalization policy could be up in the air
at this point, given that the company’s chief executive officer and founder
resigned in December 2019. Since the company bears her name and she will
continue to serve on the board of directors, Dr. Pamela Marrone will likely
continue to have some influence over the company’s future.
Drama in the
board room may be a distraction for some investors. Luckily there are fewer operational worries
with a biologically-based product line.
The company uses nominal fossil fuel, does not rely on highly toxic
chemicals and emits negligent greenhouse gases.
That means there are fewer unrecognized contingent liabilities in Marrone’s future,
leaving investors with a straight forward play on an environmentally sound
agriculture product line.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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