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Deal with it
To:Brew Readers
CFO Brew // Morning Brew // Update
A CFO takes us behind the scenes of one big deal.
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Congrats, you made it to Friday. We hope your weekend kicks off with all the thrill of the California gold rush, which President James K. Polk triggered on this day in 1848 during his State of the Union address, when he declared that “accounts of abundance of gold are of such an extraordinary character” to be found in them thar hills. By Monday, surely we’ll all be rich!

In this issue:

New green deal

IRS MIA

Jesse Klein, Natasha Piñon

STRATEGY

A portrait of Greg Adams, Chief Financial Officer for Chestnut Carbon, Chestnut Carbon, a carbon credits project developer

Greg Adams

Who said you can’t teach an old bank new tricks?

This summer, an institutional bank signed a new type of deal for a new asset class. Chestnut Carbon, a carbon market project developer that plants forests and sells the credits to corporations, collaborated with Microsoft and JPMorgan Chase to create one of the largest carbon removal offtake agreements in the United States.

Gregory Adams, Chestnut Carbon’s CFO, took CFO Brew behind the scenes of this first-of-its-kind non-recourse project financing for carbon afforestation. The company currently operates in eight states: Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Georgia, and South Carolina, where it buys land to plant native, diverse, and conservation-grade forests to generate carbon credits.

Adams spent nearly five years at JPM and the rest of his career at Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and other financial institutions, working on energy and project development and commodities. After being CFO at Chestnut for less than two years, he helped orchestrate a $210 million credit facility to provide Microsoft with 7 million tons of nature-based carbon removal credits over 25 years, from forests planted in the southeastern US.

Start early. While JPMorgan came out publicly as wanting to be the “carbon bank of choice” in late June, Adams had already been in talks with JPMorgan for months. Chestnut had signed its agreement with Microsoft in January, which was when his conversations with the bank went into high gear. But Adams floated the idea to multiple banks before the Microsoft deal. In July, Chestnut and JPMorgan closed on their deal.

“It’s a new asset class,” he told CFO Brew. “So you want to be able to go in front of people sooner than later.”

But not too early. Adams warned that “if you don’t have a contract, it’s going to be a short conversation.” He suggested drumming up interest in a new type of deal. JPMorgan declined to comment for this story, but Vijnan Batchu, global head of JPMorgan’s center for carbon transition, told Bloomberg in July that “providing this kind of financing gives developers the runway they need to succeed at an attractive cost of capital, allowing them to focus on delivering significant carbon projects and fulfilling contracts.”

For more on how Adams successfully executed on this strategy, keep reading.JK

Presented By PwC

ACCOUNTING

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) building in Washington, DC. (Credit: The Washington Post/Getty Images)

The Washington Post/Getty Images

Sure, we’d love to ask folks from the IRS how they handled the longest shutdown in US history, but we have a feeling they’re a bit busy at the moment.

Though the federal government is reopening, it’s going to take quite some time (and effort) to get things fully up and running again—particularly at the IRS, which furloughed almost half of its workers and limited its operations during the shutdown.

Instead of asking the number-crunchers who are up to their ears in backlogged paperwork, we can turn to the next best thing: the people who’ve handled it before.

At AICPA and CIMA’s National Tax Conference on November 16–18 in Washington, DC, a number of former IRS commissioners shared insights from handling IRS operations in shutdowns past. Their main takeaway is no shocker: It ain’t easy.

Keep reading.NP

Together With Corporate Finance Institute

MARKET FORCES

market forces chart

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top finance reads.

Stat: 1.1 million. That’s how many people in the US have lost their jobs so far this year, the highest number of layoffs since the height of the Covid pandemic in 2020. (Business Insider)

Quote: “I’ve had an open mind, and I’ve evolved on this, and the president has been right.”—Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent defended Trump’s tariffs Wednesday, claiming they’re boosting the economy and asserting without evidence that inflation is higher in blue states (New York Times)

Read: The metaverse is shrinking. Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg reportedly plans to cut 30% from the division, despite promising four years ago that “the metaverse is the next frontier.” (Bloomberg)

Major audit advancements: Using a human-led, tech-powered approach, PwC is transforming audits. People bring the essentials like curiosity, judgement, and skepticism, while technology amplifies their impact. The result? Earlier insights and greater transparency. Learn more.*

*A message from our sponsor.

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