Fonterra's
'skeletons
uncovered' as it predicts loss
of $590-675m for year
12
August, 2019
Fonterra's
financial skeletons are now being exposed, Canterbury dairy farmer
Tom Mason says.
He
said the dairy giant's announcement that it expects to make a
reported loss of between $590 million and $675m this financial year,
taking into account likely write-downs, was "a disaster".
The
announcement comes in advance of the annual results due next month.
Last year New Zealand's largest company made its only ever loss of
$186m.
Fonterra
chief executive Miles Hurrell said as a result, it would not pay a
dividend for the 2019 financial year. This is a first for the co-op
since 2002.
Federated
Farmers vice-president Andrew Hoggard asked "how the hell did we
get here" so that it had now had to turn "the whole bus
around".
Mason
said the expected annual result was the legacy of the last 18 years
where the ambitions of the organisation had not been matched by its
ability and capital structure.
"There
are plenty of grey hairs like me who remember the promise of 15 per
cent a year growth and a $40 billion company. We had a merger that
was sold on the basis of growth and they've not delivered at all.
It's a disaster."
Mason
said questions needed to be asked about what he believed to be a
"cosy" relationship between Fonterra and auditor PWC. Board
member Brent Goldsack is also a partner in PWC
"Maybe
there wasn't so much scrutiny around that auditing process as there
should have been," Mason said.
Mason
said his four family farms were in a worse situation now than
previously, when he had supplied 60 per cent of his milk to Synlait
and 40 per cent to Fonterra.
Federated
Farmers vice-president Andrew Hoggard asks where the talk of world
domination by Fonterra has gone.
"Now
we entirely supply Synlait but we've got 600,000 Fonterra shares, so
we're 100 per cent exposed to the share value. But every other
company sets a milk price that is referenced to Fonterra so we still
need them to do what they've done really well, which is pick up milk
and process it. They should have stuck to that rather than have grand
ambitions that they didn't have the ability or capital structure to
deliver on."
By
midday Monday the share price had fallen from $3.73 to $3.60.
Hoggard
said it was only two or three years ago that the Fonterra board and
management had toured the country promoting the "V3 strategy"
of driving more volume into higher value at velocity.
"I'm
struggling to understand how Fonterra has got into the position of
having to turn the whole bus around.
"It
[the announcement] came as a bit of a surprise.This time of the year
most of us are just head down bums up picking up calves, I haven't
been thinking too much about Fonterra," Hoggard said.
Fonterra
chief executive Miles Hurrell says the write downs do not affect the
co-op's ability to operate.
The
write downs are on its operations in Brazil, China, Australia and New
Zealand, for a total of between $820m and 860m.
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