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Home / The Country

Fonterra powders earn premium price over rivals' same products: chairman

By Andrea Fox
Herald business writer·NZ Herald·
13 Jun, 2018 06:30 AM2 mins to read

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Chairman John Wilson says it is possible Fonterra's Trusted Goodness food quality seal marketing initiative is responsible for the price spike. Photo / Richard Robinson

Chairman John Wilson says it is possible Fonterra's Trusted Goodness food quality seal marketing initiative is responsible for the price spike. Photo / Richard Robinson

Fonterra dairy ingredients are selling for $100 to $400 per tonne more than the same milk powder products are fetching for its competitors, a feat which could significantly boost the milk price, says Fonterra chairman John Wilson.

Speaking to the Herald at Fieldays, Wilson said it was possible Fonterra's Trusted Goodness food quality seal marketing initiative was responsible for the price spike, which was noticeable in Global Dairy Trade auctions over the past eight to 12 months, mainly in whole milk and skim milk powder sales.

"That's extraordinary. But the question we all have, and we have to be careful this is not made into something bigger than it is, is this sustainable going forward?

"Is it created only because of Trusted Goodness or is it because other things are happening in the market? For example 320,000 tonnes of skim milk powder is sitting in the market place at the moment in Europe, so is that having a miss-pricing impact through the market?"

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Wilson said Fonterra believed the higher prices it was attracting were sustainable, and if so could have a positive impact of 20c-40c/kg milksolids on the milk price to farmers.

"If you look at those sorts of numbers [$100-$400 a tonne] and all other things being equal - and there's a whole lot that moves around in this - that would be an impact of 20c to 40c but we need to see what happens over time.

Chairman John Wilson says it is possible Fonterra's Trusted Goodness food quality seal marketing initiative is responsible for the price spike. Photo / Richard Robinson
Chairman John Wilson says it is possible Fonterra's Trusted Goodness food quality seal marketing initiative is responsible for the price spike. Photo / Richard Robinson

"We need to wait until the end of the year to see but it's highly beneficial for our farmers if indeed there is a sustainable premium there for Fonterra ingredients."

But anecdotally the Trusted Goodness food quality seal on all Fonterra's branded products was being valued in the market, Wilson said.

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"I say it's wrong now to talk about Fonterra products as commodities. Fonterra products are largely ingredients and when you think about the plants built over the last seven or eight years, these are producing high-spec ingredients for our customers."

The Trusted Goodness programme was launched last year. The words "Trusted Goodness" and a special message targeted to different markets appear on the back of Fonterra products.

In the US, the seal states products are "non-GMO", while those sold in China say "grass fed".

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