This article was recently published on Calvin Yeo's blog, www.investinpassiveincome.com, and is reproduced with permission.
 
 RECENTLY, ONE OF my readers asked me whether I would be interested in  Felda Global.
 I replied that I am not interested as the dividend yields  are low, below 4% which is lower than the other primary palm oil  producers and that it has rather high political and execution risks.  
There seems to be a lot of excitement around this IPO, and for good  reason as the $3.2 billion Felda IPO is probably going to be the world’s  second largest IPO of this year. 
The IPO is several times  oversubscribed and will probably be priced at the top end of the price  range of RM 4 to RM 4.65 per share.
Currently, Felda is already the third largest palm oil producer in the  world in terms of planted area, behind Sime Darby and Golden Agri  Resources.
 However, the annual FFB yield is lower than most of the other  producers. 
Here’s a brief look at the top 5 palm oil producers (see table on the right).
To further understand why Felda’s FFB yield is lower than the average,  we have to look at the maturity profile of the palm oil plantations. 
The  average age of Felda’s plantation is around 20, compared with Golden  Agri which is around 12. 
That means that many of Felda’s plantations are  past prime and replanting will have to occur. 
Replanting will incur  substantial costs and it will take at least 2.5 years before the trees  start bearing fruit. It will take at least 9 years before they reach  maturity for peak production between years 10 to 20.

Overall, plantation investing is mainly about investing when majority of  the plantations are immature and young and then ride the growth as the  plantations ramp up production during the mature years. 
We can see from  the chart above that more than 50% of the plantation are past prime of  above 20 years. Felda also suffered from a history of lower yields  compared to its competitors. Operationally, it does not make much sense  to invest in Felda.
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