Nala AgriServices — Executive Summary

The opportunity in brief, the business model, the market, the financial highlights and the ask underpinning Nala AgriServices.

Nala AgriServices Business PlanSection 1 › Executive Summary

Section 1 · Business Plan

Executive Summary

The opportunity in brief, the business model, the market, the financial highlights and the ask underpinning Nala AgriServices.

Nala AgriServices (Pty) Ltd is a South African
agricultural-services company that combines contract mechanisation,
precision-farming and drone application, agronomy advisory, and input
aggregation into a single, asset-backed platform serving commercial and
emerging farmers across the Free State grain belt and adjacent districts
of the North West and Northern Cape. The Company’s proposition is
simple: most South African farmers do not need to own more equipment —
they need reliable, precisely-executed field operations delivered on
time, on a per-hectare basis, backed by data.

The venture is positioned at the intersection of three powerful
structural tailwinds: a decisive recovery in South African agriculture,
a wide and well-documented mechanisation deficit, and the
fastest-growing precision-agriculture market on the continent. It is
designed from inception to be bankable — conservatively geared,
asset-collateralised, and underpinned by recurring, contracted, seasonal
revenue.

1.1 The opportunity in brief

  • A sector in structural recovery — South African
    agriculture, forestry and fishing contributed roughly R135 billion to
    GDP in 2025 and expanded by about 17% year-on-year, the strongest
    performance of any sector of the economy, on the back of a summer-crop
    harvest near 19.6 million tonnes.
  • A persistent mechanisation gap — Sub-Saharan
    Africa averages fewer than two tractors per 1,000 hectares of arable
    land against roughly ten in South Asia and Latin America — a gap that
    contract mechanisation is uniquely placed to close without requiring
    farmers to carry the capital cost of ownership.
  • Explosive precision-farming adoption — The
    number of activated agricultural spray drones in South Africa rose from
    around 60 units in 2021 to approximately 2,000 by 2025, with
    drone-treated area approaching two million hectares — a market whose
    economics (roughly 75% lower fuel use than manned aircraft, reduced
    chemical drift, and access to difficult terrain) make outsourced
    provision compelling.
Figure 1
Figure 1 South African agriculture rebounded sharply in 2025, the strongest-growing sector of the economy.

1.2 The business model

Nala earns revenue across four integrated service lines, each
reinforcing the others through a shared client base, shared logistics,
and a common data platform:

Service line What Nala delivers Revenue basis
Contract mechanisation Tillage, planting and harvesting with a modern tractor, planter and combine fleet Per hectare, per operation
Precision & drone services Drone spraying, variable-rate application, NDVI/thermal crop scouting Per hectare + data fees
Agronomy & advisory Soil testing, agronomy retainers, digital farm-management dashboard Retainer + subscription
Input aggregation Bulk seed, fertiliser and crop-protection procurement and distribution Distribution margin
Why this model is bankable

Recurring and contracted — seasonal service contracts with commercial
anchor farmers provide visibility over per-hectare volumes ahead of each
planting and harvest window. Asset-backed — senior debt is secured against a liquid, re-saleable
fleet of tractors, combines and drones with established secondary
markets. Counter-cyclical to ownership — in tight credit conditions farmers
defer equipment purchases and outsource, expanding Nala’s addressable
demand. Development-aligned — the smallholder mechanisation-service-provider
model attracts blended and concessional capital from the Land Bank, IDC
and DBSA and strengthens B-BBEE credentials.

1.3 Financial highlights

Over the five-year plan the Company scales from
R52.0m of revenue in FY2027 to R211.8m
in FY2031, with EBITDA expanding from a thin R1.4m (a
3.0% margin in the launch year) to R50.9m (24.0%) as
the fleet reaches efficient utilisation. The plan turns net-profit
positive in FY2029 and delevers rapidly thereafter.

Equity IRR (base case)
54%
Equity money multiple
8.8×
Project (unlevered) IRR
46%
Equity IRR (downside)
32%
  FY2027 FY2028 FY2029 FY2030 FY2031
Revenue R52.0m R86.9m R127.8m R169.8m R211.8m
EBITDA R1.4m R10.5m R22.5m R36.0m R50.9m
EBITDA margin 3.0% 12.0% 18.0% 21.0% 24.0%
Net income (R8.3m) (R2.3m) R6.3m R15.5m R26.1m
DSCR 0.63× 0.90× 1.54× 2.08× 3.00×
Net debt / EBITDA 15.3× 2.9× 1.4× 0.5× -0.2×
Figure 2
Figure 2 The profit-and-loss trajectory: ramp-year losses give way to strong profitability by FY2029.

1.4 The funding ask

Nala is seeking a total initial funding package of
R57m at financial close, comprising R35m of
equity
and a R22m senior equipment-finance term
loan
, supported by a R15m committed revolving working-capital
facility and two pre-committed expansion tranches (Tranche B of R14m in
FY2028 and Tranche C of R10m in FY2029) that fund the mid-plan fleet
step-up. Inception gearing of 48% is conservative for an asset-backed
venture and delevers to 18% by FY2031.

Uses of funds (at close) R’m Share
Fleet, equipment & platform capex R44.1m 81.7%
Pre-launch working capital R5.0m 9.3%
Debt-service reserve account R3.0m 5.6%
Contingency R1.9m 3.5%
Total uses at close R54.0m 100%

1.5 Key risks — disclosed up front

Management believes the following are the plan’s most material risks.
Each is examined in detail in Section 11, with mitigants summarised here
for transparency:

Principal risks and first-order mitigants

Ramp-year coverage. DSCR is below 1.0× in FY2027
(0.63×) and FY2028 (0.90×). Mitigated by a 12-month capital grace on
each senior tranche, a R3m debt-service reserve, revolver headroom and a
sponsor standby undertaking. Aggressive growth trajectory. Revenue compounds at
roughly 42% per annum off a low base; this is capacity-backed (tied to
fleet additions and defensible utilisation) rather than
market-share-driven, and stress-tested in the downside case. Exit-multiple dependency. A meaningful portion of
equity value is realised at exit. The base case assumes a conservative
5.5× EV/EBITDA; a 4.5× downside still returns 32% to equity. Climatic & biosecurity exposure. Drought, hail
and foot-and-mouth-type events affect volumes. Mitigated by geographic
spread, service diversification across the crop calendar, and
weather-indexed contract terms.

Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of Nala AgriServices (Pty) Ltd.