Former investors seek class action lawsuit against Farmers Edge

Former investors in Manitoba-based ag tech firm Farmers Edge have asked the B.C. Supreme Court to certify a class action lawsuit against the company, former leaders and its main shareholder.

Vancouver resident Willson Leung and Ottawa resident Philippe Golin, both identified as former shareholders in Farmers Edge, filed the suit on February 22.

Farmers Edge is a digital agronomy firm that offers services such as variable rate nutrition management and FarmCommand, a data management and analytics platform.

Farmers Edge, founder and former CEO Wade Barnes, former chief financial officer David Patrick, Fairfax Financial Holdings and several financial underwriters are named in the suit asking for a combined total of $270 million in damages.

Read Also

Dr. Cheryl Waldner presents current feedlot health and nutrition research during the Livestock and Forage Centre of Excellence Field Day southeast of Saskatoon, Sask. Waldner is the Beef Cattle Research Council Industrial Research Chair in One Health and Production Limiting Diseases at the University of Saskatchewan’s Western College of Veterinary Medicine. Photo: Melissa Jeffers-Bezan

LFCE Field Day covers everything from pneumonia to drought

Attendees took in presentations outdoors on genetics and genomics, managing forage, water and drought, plus feedlot health and management. A hot topic of conversation was the drought — or lack thereof. Much of the current research at the University of Saskatchewan focuses on drought.

“Defendants misrepresented material facts about the Company’s business. The Plaintiffs bring this action on behalf of FE securityholders who suffered losses as a result of these misrepresentations in the primary and secondary market for FE securities,” says the statement of claim.

None of the allegations have been proven in court. No statements of defense have been filed.

The statement of claim says the company was heavily indebted via debentures owed to Fairfax, its major shareholder, and was unable to secure additional capital at the time it launched its initial public offering in March 2021.

It also alleges that it overstated the number of partnerships and the nature of the relationships it had with companies that it said would assist in marketing or promoting the company’s products to farmers.

It further alleges that Farmers Edge misrepresented its income from farmer subscriptions to its products.

In its IPO, Farmers Edge sold nearly 7.4 million shares at $17 per share for total gross proceeds of about $125 million, according to a company news release.

On the day the company went public in March 2021, Barnes told media the company would use the new funding — totalling a little over $125 million — to build on its vision of digital farming.

“We’ll be scaling up our teams to grow the business,” he said. “We’ll also be developing new products.”

However, share prices dropped steadily and the company was beset by financial woes. Barnes left the company in early 2022. In August 2023, it announced it was laying off 20 per cent of its workforce and consolidating operations in North America.

At the beginning of 2024, Farmers Edge inked a deal with Fairfax to sell all common shares for 35 cents apiece — at the time, Fairfax owned 61 per cent of the company’s shares — and to take the company private again.

Source: Farmtario.com

Share