"The support of the investors is a strong signal to us that the market has faith in our growth story. We have proven that establishing an internationally competitive food production company in the Baltics is possible."

— Mark Eikner, Management Board Member, Yook OÜ · May 2026

In a transaction that signals a broadening appetite for food innovation across Europe's smaller capital markets, Estonian oat drink producer YOOK has successfully closed its debut public bond offering — raising €4,486,000 from 860 investors across Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The offering, which ran from 28 April to 11 May 2026, attracted demand that exceeded its initial target by nearly 1.5 times, prompting the company to exercise its oversubscription option and issue the full volume of bonds subscribed.

The transaction marks a defining moment for YOOK — not just as a financing milestone, but as a strategic inflection point. In less than three years of operation, the company has scaled from a standing start in Türi, Estonia to a plant-based platform exporting across more than ten international markets, competing directly against global brands in its home market, and now accessing public capital for the first time.

The bonds — denominated at €1,000 per unit with an annual coupon of 11%, paid quarterly, and maturing on 14 May 2029 — are expected to begin trading on the First North Bond List of Nasdaq Tallinn on or around 18 May 2026.


Part One

The Company: From Türi to Ten Markets in Under Three Years

YOOK Production AS, the operating subsidiary of issuer Yook OÜ, is an Estonian oat drink manufacturer established in 2024 with its production facility located in Türi — a small town in central Estonia that has quietly become the origin point of one of the Baltics' fastest-scaling food export stories.

In 2025, YOOK grew revenue 2.5 times year-on-year. By the first quarter of 2026, the company was already running 2.5 times ahead of the equivalent period in 2025. Exports now account for 44% of total revenue, spanning markets including Finland, Norway, the UAE, Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, India, and Romania.

The Türi factory operates at a single-shift capacity of 20 million litres per year — a figure that represents substantial headroom for growth without requiring major additional capital investment in production infrastructure.

In its home market, YOOK has achieved a position as the best-selling oat drink brand in Estonian retail — in its second year of operations, in direct competition with established multinational players. Internationally, the company reached a notable commercial landmark in 2025 when it became the first food producer from the Baltic states to enter into a partnership with Starbucks: all franchise locations in Ankara now serve hot and cold coffee drinks using YOOK oat drink produced in Türi.

Strategic context

YOOK's trajectory — market entry, export validation, brand establishment, and now public capital access — is structurally rare for a food company of its age. The pace of its internationalisation, combined with a clearly defined factory footprint, positions it as a benchmark case for Baltic food brand building.

Part Two

The Offering: Oversubscribed, Fully Allocated

The bond offering was structured as the first tranche of a €6,000,000 secured bond programme, with an initial target of up to €3,000,000. The programme parameters were announced in late April 2026, with a subscription window of 28 April to 11 May — a compressed timeline that nonetheless generated strong engagement across all three Baltic investor markets.

Investor Participation — YOOK Bond Offering, May 2026
Market
Amount Subscribed
Share of Total
Estonia
€3,185,000
71% of total
Latvia
€959,000
21% of total
Lithuania
€342,000
8% of total
Total
€4,486,000
860 investors

All 860 investors were treated equally in the allocation process — every investor who submitted a subscription order received the full amount they requested. This allocation approach reflects both the oversubscription mechanics and a deliberate decision by the issuer to honour every participant's commitment without proration.

The financial terms of the bonds carry a 3-year tenor to May 2029, secured by a pledge over 100% of the shares of YOOK Production AS, managed by an independent collateral agent — TRINITI Collateral Agent XVII OÜ. The structure provides bondholders with direct recourse to the operating entity in the event of default, a key feature for retail investor participation in the Baltic market.

Capital allocation

The funds raised will be used to finance further growth of the YOOK Group — including operational scaling toward positive EBITDA — and to refinance certain existing debt obligations, consolidating the company's financing structure as it enters its next phase.

Part Three

Growth Trajectory: Toward EBITDA Positive in H1 2027

YOOK's management has articulated a clear near-term target: achieve positive EBITDA in the first half of 2027. This milestone, if met, would mark the transition of the company from investment-phase growth to self-sustaining operational profitability — a transition that carries significant implications for its capital markets positioning and future financing capacity.

The company's operating model is predicated on capacity utilisation: the Türi factory's existing infrastructure can support substantial revenue growth without the capital intensity of new production investment. The primary drivers of margin improvement are therefore commercial — volumes, export market penetration, and pricing — rather than structural.

The EBITDA target reflects a deliberate phasing of the business: initial losses were an accepted cost of building production capacity, product development, and export infrastructure. As Katre Kõvask, CEO of YOOK Production AS, has noted, the company has now "successfully completed its most critical phase" — securing customers, opening domestic and export markets, and establishing the operational processes required for scale.

The next stage, in management's framing, is profitable growth. The bond proceeds are the primary instrument of that transition.

For investors and market observers, the question is whether the revenue growth trajectory — 2.5x year-on-year in 2025, and tracking ahead of that pace in early 2026 — is translating into meaningful gross margin improvement. The company's public financial disclosures, available through the bond information document and Nasdaq Baltic, provide the framework for that assessment. The information document references consolidated unaudited financial statements for 2024 and 2025, alongside audited annual accounts for 2024.