Wingara appoints Christopher Hood as CEO to drive agricultural trading rebuild
Wingara AG (ASX: WNR) has appointed Christopher Hood as Chief Executive Officer, effective 17 July 2026. Hood will be responsible for executing the Company’s strategy and its day-to-day management, reporting to the Board.
The appointment is positioned as a key step in delivering the organic growth strategy described in Wingara’s 2026 Annual Report. That strategy centres on rebuilding activity through domestic hay trading, storage coordination and agricultural logistics, drawing on the Company’s existing grower and customer relationships.
Adding a further shareholder-alignment dimension, Hood’s fixed remuneration is proposed to be settled entirely in equity rather than cash, subject to shareholder approval. The structure ties his outcomes directly to those of shareholders.
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A hands-on operator for the Queensland fodder market
Hood is a Queensland-based business executive whose on-the-ground market presence is central to the strategic thesis behind his appointment. His background spans agricultural production, grain and fodder storage, containerised export handling, and road and rail logistics.
That combination is directly relevant to redeveloping customer relationships across the fodder and protein businesses within Queensland, the region where Wingara sees demand strongest.
His career track record includes:
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Co-founding Grainx Australia, developing a large-scale grain storage, handling and export containerisation business
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Advancing the development of East West Road and Rail’s intermodal terminal network
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Founding Welcome River Capital, which has established, acquired and grown businesses across agriculture and other sectors
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Helping grow Viking Industries Ltd from a private marine and port business into a public company, subsequently acquired in 2008
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Holding a Bachelor of Business and serving two terms as a director of the Queensland Rural Adjustment Authority
Marcello Diamante, Executive Chairman
“On behalf of the Board, I am genuinely excited to welcome Chris to Wingara. We have taken the time to find a leader who combines commercial drive with practical, hands-on agricultural and logistics experience. Additionally, Chris’ strong on-the-ground knowledge of the Queensland fodder market provides Wingara with actionable growth opportunities. He understands the customers we want to serve and the logistics required to move hay from southern growing regions into markets where demand is strongest.”
The strategy Hood is stepping into
At its core, Wingara operates as an agricultural trading and logistics business. Its activities include agricultural product procurement and trading, customer and supplier coordination, storage arrangements, transport planning, and the management of third-party logistics providers, including containerised agricultural freight where commercially appropriate.
The trade flow is straightforward. Wingara has been progressing opportunities to source suitable hay and fodder from Victoria and South Australia for supply into Queensland and New South Wales.
Target customers include cattle producers, feedlots, saleyards, processors and other livestock and animal-protein businesses with recurring fodder requirements. For investors, this recurring demand, combined with existing grower and customer relationships, forms the foundation for rebuilding recurring revenue.
Following commencement, Hood is expected to review Wingara’s operating strategy and consult with growers, customers, storage and transport providers, shareholders and other stakeholders. This review is expected to inform an updated operating plan and a longer-term vision for the business, rather than representing a firm commitment at this stage.
Remuneration structured for cash preservation and shareholder alignment
The standout investor angle sits in how the appointment is funded. Hood’s total fixed remuneration of $50,014.77 per annum, inclusive of statutory superannuation, is proposed to be settled entirely in equity instead of cash, subject to shareholder approval.
According to the Company, this structure helps reduce near-term cash requirements while tying Hood’s success directly to shareholder outcomes. Importantly, the full equity package remains subject to shareholder approval and has not been issued.
The proposed equity package comprises the following components.
| Component | Quantity | Price / Exercise | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loan funded shares | 30,953,207 ordinary shares | $0.001 per share | Limited recourse loan, recourse limited to the shares |
| Remuneration shares | 17,366,242 ordinary shares | Consideration for 12-month remuneration | From commencement date |
| Options | 241,818,100 options | Exercise $0.001429, expiry 4 years | Vesting on revenue milestones (see below) |
The 241,818,100 options are split across four equal tranches of 60,454,525 options each, with vesting tied to milestones measured on organically generated revenue:
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Tranche 1: organically generated revenue from grant reaches $500,000
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Tranche 2: organically generated revenue from grant reaches $1,080,000
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Tranche 3: organically generated revenue from grant reaches $1,740,000
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Tranche 4: organically generated revenue from grant reaches $2,500,000
Each tranche is subject to audited accounts, Board ratification and continued employment. The announcement notes that “organically generated revenue” excludes revenue from a merger or acquisition where the transaction is with a related party or the acquisition is funded by Wingara equity or equivalent external equity funding, but may include revenue from acquisitions funded by internally generated cash flow or proceeds from exercised options.
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What it means for shareholders and what happens next
The equity structure carries potential dilution and control implications. If all proposed shares are issued and all options are exercised, Hood or his nominee may receive up to 290,137,549 ordinary shares in aggregate, before allowing for any other changes in the Company’s capital. Shareholder approval may be required for Hood to exercise options, should they successfully vest.
On the approval pathway, the Company has stated it will seek the relevant shareholder approvals as soon as practicable, with further detail to be provided in the Notice of Annual General Meeting. Should approval not be obtained, Wingara and Hood will negotiate an alternative remuneration arrangement in good faith, with the CEO appointment otherwise ongoing under the employment agreement.
The appointment also triggers a board transition. Marcello Diamante will remain Executive Chairman until 31 August 2026 to enable an orderly transfer of executive responsibilities, before transitioning to Non-Executive Chairman from 1 September 2026.
Christopher Hood, incoming Chief Executive Officer
“I am grateful for the Board’s confidence and excited by the opportunity to lead Wingara at such a pivotal stage in the Company’s development. I look forward to working closely with the Board, shareholders, growers, customers and logistics partners to advance Wingara’s existing business initiatives and shape an updated operating vision that supports sustainable growth in agricultural trading and logistics.”
Wingara has stated it looks forward to keeping the market informed of Hood’s progress within the business and its broader agricultural platform. As with any early-stage rebuild, the outcomes remain dependent on execution and, in the case of the equity package, shareholder approval.
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