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Financing a 2017 Yarder for $1.2M?

Hallback

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Jun 1, 2011
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Aberdeen Wa.
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Gyppo tower logger
I made a deal with a very large publicly traded timber company yesterday and signed a contract for 10 years worth of work at 18 million board feet per year, More if we need it to keep us busy through the year.
The only catch is we need to purchase a grapple yarder to do these jobs. With the current economic and political climate I don't know of any places that would touch yarder financing right now.
Who would you recommend as our local institutions are out as that is too high of a dollar amount for them.
 

crane operator

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Mar 27, 2009
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sw missouri
With a signed contract for the work, I can't believe any business orientated bank wouldn't be able to swing 1.2 million.

I grew up around farming and construction geared banks, and 1.2 - while its a big number, wouldn't make very many of those bankers blink.

Does the contract wording give the big company too many "outs" for them to get out of the work? Of course any contract is worth the paper its written on, and I'm guessing they could afford more lawyers for longer than you can. I could see that making them pause.

If the numbers work though, most bankers don't care if you are ant farming or hot air balloon racing- as long as they get their money next friday. Of course, they will expect you to not really need the banker i.e. you actually have the money, or a bunch of collateral they could take, if things don't work out.

My experience is that's their preferred method, that you actually don't need the banker, and really just enjoy paying interest. I've always felt like if I didn't need the banker, I probably wouldn't be there asking for the money.

All of that said, I am not familiar at all with the logging game, and wouldn't know how that lending works. I've always borrowed "locally" and have stayed away from the larger nationwide/ "equipment financing " sources. They are always calling and offering financing, but I don't read fine print too well, and I don't trust my local bankers further than I can throw them, I'm sure not throwing in with someone over the internet, or with someone that telemarkets me.

Good luck and I hope the contract works out, sounds like it could be a great opportunity.
 

excavator

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Oct 16, 2006
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1,450
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Pacific North West
I'm sure you've already thought of this, but anyone have one that isn't being used that would rent it or maybe rent/operate it for you? Something you wouldn't be tied into as tightly as a bank loan. Do you see yourself having a use for one after this job is finished? Just a thought.
 

Hallback

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Jun 1, 2011
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Location
Aberdeen Wa.
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Gyppo tower logger
Nobody rents a yarder as you can destroy them in a hurry and a new one to have built is about two and a half million dollars.
It is such a highly specialized piece of equipment that people just do not rent them out and the people that have them care for them dearly as the ones we have. Yes I've got work lined out till I retire for one The problem is just getting somebody to get in on the note with it.
It's been a pretty rough year and a half over here with the skyrocketed fuel prices and the up and down lumber market on the coast so everybody's very leery.
 

CM1995

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Hallback we financed a new 325FL through the Bank of the West in 2018. They had cheaper rates than Cat Financial at the time. Not sure if they still have a strong equipment lending department though.



They are always calling and offering financing, but I don't read fine print too well, and I don't trust my local bankers further than I can throw them, I'm sure not throwing in with someone over the internet, or with someone that telemarkets me.

Same here. Kinda pisses me off they send letters in the mail offering up to $300K in financing per truck or piece of equipment, blah, blah, blah.. Just seams this is fertilizer to the identity thieves out there.
 

CM1995

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I wouldn't finance a lawnmower at todays rates. My LOC is currently 9%..............I wont even use it.

We're getting 4.8% for 48 months through Cat Financial on Next Gen 325. IIRC The Bank of the West rate was 3.6% for 48 back in 2018.

Local credit union is just under 6% for new auto loans. Not like they used to be but historically rates are still low.

I would guess financing for something as specialized as a yarder used is going to be much higher.
 

Vetech63

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Aug 10, 2016
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Oklahoma
We're getting 4.8% for 48 months through Cat Financial on Next Gen 325. IIRC The Bank of the West rate was 3.6% for 48 back in 2018.

Local credit union is just under 6% for new auto loans. Not like they used to be but historically rates are still low.

I would guess financing for something as specialized as a yarder used is going to be much higher.
Then my bank is greedy.
 

CM1995

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Kind of tough to make money without gear isn't it?

And it's stupid expensive to boot!

We're having to invest in GPS to compete on the grading portion of our jobs. I used to bid $.35 per SF for final grading for parking lots, sidewalks, etc. Now we can do it for $.20 PSF and have to in order to get the job. Auto GPS on the dozer has enable us to do that and make money at $.20.
 

crane operator

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Mar 27, 2009
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sw missouri
Just curious if you've found anything and what rates are.

I looked over my stuff and my line of credit has jumped to around 8. My building is at 5%, but I bet it will jump also when renewal time comes around.
 

Welder Dave

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Oct 11, 2014
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Canada
They would buy the machine and you would work it off over a period of years (they'd basically finance it for you) or they would keep it at the end?
 

Hallback

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Jun 1, 2011
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Aberdeen Wa.
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Gyppo tower logger
No, they would purchase the machine and hold X amount of dollars retention per ton produced until it was paid for.
These companies are realizing they have to start doing this. The machine I'm looking at up there on the interior BC that's exactly how it was purchased new.
There are quite a few machines down here the same way, every one of those new Tigercat yarders was timber company backed down here as well.

These big companies all know that they're going to have to do it but it's like the elephant in the room that nobody's talking about. If they want contractors to step up into late model cable logging procedures & gear, that's what they have to start doing.
 

CM1995

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Welder Dave

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It's nice the lumber companies help foot some of the cost to get the lumber. I think an advantage for you is that since they own the yarder it would be easier for them to extend the contract with you. They don't normally harvest the lumber themselves do they? They need someone to run the yarder or try to sell it at the end of the contract. Since they still need lumber everything is in place.
 

Hallback

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Aberdeen Wa.
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Gyppo tower logger
What's the correlation between on the stump tonnage and BF lumber pricing?

Lumber right now is the lowest it's been in the last couple of years.

Well if you take a thousand board foot of log by the time it gets milled they will have about 2,200 board feet of lumber.

And even if lumber is at the lowest price it has been in a few years they're still making a killing.
 

Hallback

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Jun 1, 2011
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Aberdeen Wa.
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Gyppo tower logger
It's nice the lumber companies help foot some of the cost to get the lumber. I think an advantage for you is that since they own the yarder it would be easier for them to extend the contract with you. They don't normally harvest the lumber themselves do they? They need someone to run the yarder or try to sell it at the end of the contract. Since they still need lumber everything is in place.
No, they do not run company logging crews anymore. As a matter of fact the one harvest manager that was 100% for this to happen was the one who was head of company crews when they had them.

The way I explained it to him in our meeting was you take a highway contractor, if they have a project they get generally 25% of the contract price up front and then construction draws as they go. Same as a home builder, etc.

Loggers are the only ones that are dumb enough to do the work first and front all of the cost waiting for it to trickle in afterwards.

I told them that I wasn't going to operate that way anymore. I'm going to operate as a contractor on any large scale project would.
 
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