The New Zealand Herald

Fonterra’s creation in focus

Major study to see if farmers are better off

- Andrea Fox

Amajor new study will question if Fonterra’s farmer-shareholde­rs are better off as a result of the company’s creation nearly 17 years ago and how well it has allocated their capital.

The work is being commission­ed by the Fonterra Shareholde­rs Council in a bid to restore confidence among Fonterra’s 10,000 farmer-owners, whose confidence has been knocked by questions around the big cooperativ­e’s financial performanc­e and overseas investment issues, particular­ly in China.

The council, comprising 25 farmerelec­ted representa­tives and charged with policing farmer-shareholde­r interests, is drawing up terms of reference, commission­ing profession­al analysis and intends the work to be completed this financial year, said chairman Duncan Coull.

“These questions need to be answered and farmers need confidence that capital is being put to good use and that value is being created for them.

“We monitor the performanc­e of the business on an annual basis . . . there’s been all these discussion­s in the farming base about the value it represents for us as farmers and there’s been a number of iterations, so to move forward we need to do this big piece [of] work.

“There are unanswered questions and if we can answer them in a straightfo­rward way, and if that is part of the reset of the cooperativ­e, that’s got to be a positive.”

He revealed the study when questioned by the Herald over the council’s view of the heavy losses, which some observers have called “wealth destructio­n”, that Fonterra has taken on its China investment­s.

He said the questions around it were “valid”.

“The question that needs to be asked is where are we today relative to when we were formed (2001) and how much better off are farmers as a consequenc­e. That’s the nub of the issue.” Coull said the study would also look at where Fonterra, New Zealand’s biggest company by revenue, had allocated its capital and how well it had put it to use.

“It’s not as simple as looking at a balance sheet of Fonterra and drawing some conclusion­s.”

Farmers need confidence that capital is being put to good use. Duncan Coull

He said Fonterra’s share value was never going to be a true reflection of the value of the company.

“Only a very small percentage of the total enterprise value of the business is actually liquid. And then you take farm investment­s over time. There’s a whole piece of work has to go into this and those questions need to be answered.”

Coull said there was a lot of discussion in the shareholde­r base about the value Fonterra offers and many interpreta­tions as well as misinforma­tion.

Fonterra was created from a merger under enabling legislatio­n in 2001. At the time it had 96 per cent of the country’s raw milk market. Today that has fallen to 82 per cent.

 ??  ?? Duncan Coull says there is a lot of discussion in the shareholde­r base about the value Fonterra offers.
Duncan Coull says there is a lot of discussion in the shareholde­r base about the value Fonterra offers.

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