Posts Tagged ‘craig bandoroff’

HELP MAKE WEBB A WINNER IN KENTUCKY

Monday, July 27th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
You don’t have to live in the 18th Senate district of Kentucky to make a difference in the special election Aug. 25 to choose a replacement for state Sen. Charlie Borders, the Republican who chaired the Senate Appropriations and Revenue Committee that killed House Bill 2, legislation permitting VLTs or slot machines at state racetracks.

If you happen to live in that district and care about the horse industry, there is a clear-cut choice between the two candidates running for the seat vacated when Borders accepted a position on the Public Service Commission offered by Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear. The two candidates are Democrat Robin Webb (pictured, left) of Grayson, who has served in the House of Representatives on behalf of the 96th District since 1999, and Republican Dr. Jack Ditty, a dermatologist from Greenup County. The 18th district encompasses the northeastern Kentucky counties of Bracken, Carter, Greenup, Lewis, Mason and Robertson.

Webb voted for House Bill 2. She is an experienced horsewoman with years of involvement with Tennessee Walking Horses. Ditty said he wants to help the horse industry but opposes the expansion of gambling and would have voted against House Bill 2 if given the chance.

A fund-raiser is being held on Webb’s behalf from 5-6:30 p.m. tomorrow night (Tuesday, July 28) at Bruce Hundley’s Saxony Farm between Lexington and Versailles, Ky. It is being hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Craig Bandoroff, Bill Casner, Johnny T.L. Jones III, Mr. and Mrs. Mike McMahon, Jack Smith III, Robert Clay, Earl Rogers and Elisabeth Jensen. (Call 859 983-8703 for details.)

That same night, Don and Mira Ball are hosting a fund-raiser “honoring” and benefiting the Republican Caucus that killed House Bill 2 at their Donamire Farm. Don Ball is said to have great influence over Senate President David “Blackjack” Williams, the Republican from Burkesville who reportedly frequents Indiana and Mississippi casinos but is determined to keep Kentucky racetracks from getting VLTs that would level the economic playing field with states like Indiana, West Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Florida, Louisiana, New Mexico and soon Maryland and Ohio.

Could the choice between the candidates and the fund-raisers be any more distinct? Donamire Farm is a showplace farm owned by a family that has made a fortune building thousands of houses across central Kentucky with their Ball Homes. Saxony Farm is a working family farm, as seen here in this segment from a 1995 KET (public television) program.

Senate Republicans hold a 21-16 edge over Democrats, with one Independent. While it isn’t known how all of the Republicans in the Senate would have voted on House Bill 2 since the A&R Committee stopped it from getting to the Senate floor for a vote, only one of the Republican members of the committee, Tom Buford of Nicholasville, supported the bill.

The election of Webb would close the gap and send a message to Williams and the rest of the Republicans in the Senate that they might want to reconsider their position on House Bill 2 or future VLT legislation.

In an interview with the Paulick Report, Webb said she voted for House Bill 2 “because it was restricted to gaming venues that were already established. This industry needs to be competitive with other states. I appreciate it as one of our signature industries and a major economic driver. The bill was not only for racing breeds but for the equine industry over all–racing, non-racing, research and education. The issue is multi-faceted.”

Webb has a deep personal involvement with horses. “I showed pleasure horses most of my life,” she said. “I was a licensed walking horse judge at one time, I’ve been a horse show announcer, have taught 4H camps, was a 4H state champion and like to trail ride. I’ve always had an interest in horses. I’m a horsewoman and I appreciate the industry.”

She’s got plenty of experience in the political world as well, having learned bi-partisanship in her own home while growing up. Her deceased father was a Republican who was an alternate to that party’s 1968 presidential convention and her mother was a delegate at the 1972 Democratic convention.”

Webb, who is the second-ranking member of the House Budget Committee, said she can bring a great deal of budget experience to the Senate. She is also a tough and proud woman who has overcome personal difficulties, including an abusive spousal relationship and health problems (her own, and that of a prematurely born baby)  that have given her a very intimate knowledge of the challenges this country faces with its health-care crisis.

To learn more about Robin Webb, click here. For information on Tuesday’s Webb for Senate fund-raiser, call (859) 983-8703. If you are unable to attend and want to make a donation to Robin Webb’s Senate campaign, click here.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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STUD FEES: PENDULUM SWINGS TOWARD BREEDERS

Friday, December 12th, 2008

By Ray Paulick

Thursday’s announcement by Walmac Farm of a “breeders stimulus plan” that allows breeders to pay 2009 stud fees from the proceeds of the sale of weanlings or yearlings is further proof that an increasing number of Kentucky’s stallion farms are recognizing mare owners as partners in their business. The steep declines in bloodstock prices in 2008 and the very real threat that many breeders could go out of business if the economics do not change has led virtually every major stallion station to reduce 2009 stud fees and relax deadlines for when the payments are due.

In the most simple terms, without mare owners, stallion farms would have no customers. If stud fees were not reduced and payment schedules relaxed, there would be fewer breeders around for the 2009 breeding season. The changes were fueled by a survival instinct.

There are only a handful of stallion farms continuing what in recent years was the widely accepted policy of stud fees due in September or November of the year of conception. Even some of those holdout farms are showing flexibility on payment schedules. Most stallion operations have changed to a payable when foal stands and nurses program; some in that category offer discounts for breeders who are willing to pay stud fees early. Although the stands and nurses policy has been in place for years at some farms, a number of breeders pointed to the decision by Lane’s End to adopt that policy for 2009 as a bellwether move. Others quickly followed suit.

Two relatively new stallion stations, Darley and Stonewall Farm, have created unique incentive programs for many of their stallions. Some farms that reduced 2009 stud fees in September during the Keeneland yearling sale have come back with a second round of fee reductions because bookings were coming in at an alarmingly slow pace.

“Changing from payable on Sept. 1 to out of proceeds is a huge difference,” one breeder told the Paulick Report. “It gives a breeder two years of the use of his money. It should be the universal policy. It gives breeders the chance to stay in business. And let’s face it, the stallion farms need us. I guess you’ve got to really worry when stallion farms are hit; they’ve been in total control.”

“All the stallion managers announcing reduced fees want to be seen as benefactors,” said breeder Garrett Redmond. “In fact, they are trying to preserve their own business. Mare owners will be short of money next year because their 2008 sales were for less than needed or horses were not sold at all.  They need help to pay fees due when foals stand and nurse in 2009.  Reduction in fees due in spring 2010 will not help.”

“There’s a tendency to think the stallion guys took it to us for a long, long time and we overpaid, and we get even now,” said breeder Craig Bandoroff of Denali Stud. “That’s not totally fair. It’s a market economy ruled by supply and demand. I love the idea of stands and nurses, but if you want to pay on Nov. 1 you get a discount. That’s the best deal going. Payable Sept. 1 was terrible; you hadn’t sold your yearlings yet.”

“The pendulum is definitely swinging back from stallion farms to the mare owner,” said Olin Gentry of Gaines-Gentry Thoroughbreds. “Popularity and demand has allowed some farms to get away with Sept. 1, but there’s more and more pressure to give stands and nurses. There aren’t many holdouts.”

One farm staying with a Sept. 1 policy on some of its stallions is Airdrie Stud. “We believe that everybody has the right and should have the opportunity to set their stud fees according to the way they are the fairest relative to the product they are selling,” said owner Brereton Jones. “We raised Indian Charlie’s fee 50% and he’s already booked full; his fee is due Sept. 1.”

Jones said some other fees will be due at time of foaling. “We work with each breeder who calls in here, and it depends on the stallion they want to breed to; it’s the free enterprise system at its best. We’ll discuss packages with anybody; if someone wants to breed three mares to a stallion, we will work out an arrangement. I think the general attitude of breeders is that Airdrie’s fees have always been extremely fair, and consequently they’ve been successful.”

The key to Airdrie’s fees and schedule, Jones said, is flexibility. “Our policy is geared to the success of both the owners of the stallion and the owners of the mares.”

Darley set all stallion contracts for stands and nurses when it was established at the former Jonabell Farm Sheikh Mohammed purchased in 2001. In 2007, the farm introduced pay from proceeds fees that stallion nominations manager Charlie Boden said is actually a “pay when you sell with forgiveness” policy. “We try to assess the risk on the front end,” Boden said, “but if we’re wrong and the resulting offspring brings half the stud fee, we don’t bill them for the difference.” The policy was introduced a few years earlier at Darley’s stallion operation in England.

“We’re trying to help breeders make a prudent decision in not overbreeding a mare,” Boden said. “It makes more sense to people these days. I think the days of overbreeding mares should be screeching to a halt unless the stallion is overpriced.”

Darley’s policy lets breeders decide whether to pay from proceeds of a weanling or yearling sale. Not all stallions are eligible for the program; Boden said he tries to limit it to stallions standing for $20,000 or less.

Boden also said Darley has offered what he calls a “Grade 1 club” on certain stallions, giving a free season to mares that were Grade 1 winners or Grade 1 producers.

In light of Sheikh Mohammed’s enormous wealth, Boden was asked if these policies were designed to put the squeeze on competing stallion farms. “Sheikh Mohammed wants breeders to make money,” Boden said. “He wants the business to thrive. He’s a fan of the sport and the industry as a whole. He’s not trying to put anyone else out of business. He’s trying to help a breeder raise a top horse at a competitive price. His goal is to perpetuate an industry that he loves.”

Stonewall Farm’s first breeding season was 2006, and in order to make a splash in the industry it adopted several creative incentive plans for breeders. One offered free seasons (for stallions the farm owns wholly) to graded stakes-winning or graded stakes-producing mares. Another provides a free return season to stallions for mares that produced a stakes winner from that stallion. A third policy permits a breeder to come back for a free mating for a mare if it produced a top three weanling price for that sire.

In an effort to reach out to some of the lucrative state incentive programs, Stonewall is now offering a complimentary no-guarantee season for approved mares that will foal in Louisiana, New York or Pennsylvania, in exchange for being named co-breeder (the mare owner would remain the full owner of the foal). By so doing, Stonewall would be eligible for half of the breeders awards in those states.

The programs evolved from Stonewall’s owner, Audrey Haisfield, and her husband, Richard, according to Clark Shepherd, a Stonewall manager and pedigree analyst. “They looked at how things were done in the business and decided it didn’t have to be that way,” he said. “We’ve since seen a lot of other outfits begin to follow suit.”

Will the innovative policies, fee reductions and relaxed payment schedules be enough to help breeders return to profitability?

There seems to be no consensus on that question.

“In the face of the financial crisis, a lot of syndicate managers might be a little too dramatic in fee reductions,” said Olin Gentry, “particularly some of the ones that announced a second round of cuts. People are going to breed their mares; they’re just coming in slower because they are tentative, waiting to see if there are going to be more reductions.

“It’s all a cycle. If you put pressure on stallion values, what people are willing to pay for yearlings is affected. You need a happy medium where it’s fair. You don’t want the stallion owners to make all the money and you don’t want it too easy for the breeder. “

Garrett Redmond disagreed. “Owners can avoid a problem in 2010 by not breeding in 2009,” he said. “If stallion managers are serious about helping, they should retroactively reduce the fees contracted in 2008. The least they can do is change the fees coming due to the fees they are advertising for 2009.  They might also convert contracts to foal shares or pay when you sell.”


“The one thing you are seeing is no matter what the advertised stud fee is, your client wants to know, ‘Can we do better?’” said Bandoroff.

Another breeder boiled it down to a simple good news/bad news scenario.

"The good news is prices are down for stallions," he said. "The bad news is it shows what deep shit we are in."

(Note to readers: Take our poll on how stallion farms have reacted in the face of the economic crisis and falling bloodstock prices. The Daily Paulick Poll can be found on the left-hand column of the Paulick Report home page.)

Copyright © 2008, The Paulick Report

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