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Home / The Country

Fonterra units up 24 per cent since new strategy unveiled

BusinessDesk
7 Oct, 2019 02:13 AM2 mins to read

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Fonterra head office, Fanshawe St, Auckland. Photo/Michael Craig

Fonterra head office, Fanshawe St, Auckland. Photo/Michael Craig

Farmer-owned Fonterra Cooperative Group shares and units in the Fonterra Shareholders Fund have gained about 24 per cent since the beleaguered cooperative unveiled its new strategy at the end of September.

The units were last up 6.6 per cent at $4.03 while the farmer-owned shares were up 6.1 per cent $4.01, the highest since June. However, both the units and the shares are still down around 19 per cent this year and are still worth less than half their all-time high of $8.09 in May 2013.

"It's somewhat of a vote of confidence in the new strategy and management. They'll need to deliver at this share price," said Brad Gordon, an investment advisor for Hobson Wealth Partners.

On Sept. 26, the cooperative unveiled its new strategy as it posted a net loss attributable to shareholders of $557 million in the 12 months ended July 31, widening from its maiden loss of $221m a year earlier.

The new strategy puts greater emphasis on extracting value rather than pursuing volume. The strategy also brings the focus squarely back to New Zealand.

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At the time, chief executive Miles Hurrell told BusinessDesk that Fonterra sought farmer input into the new strategic direction, something he said would be helpful in getting "buy-in on the direction of travel."

Units in the Fonterra Shareholders Fund, listed on on the NZX
Units in the Fonterra Shareholders Fund, listed on on the NZX

Hamilton Hindin Green investor advisor Grant Davies said the lift in the share and unit price could be due to farmers "sharing up," or buying shares to match their production.

Fonterra suppliers are required to hold the number of shares needed to match their production: at a minimum, one share is held for every kilogram of milksolids supplied. Shareholding requirements are set June 1, the first day of the new season. Compliance, however, is tested after Dec. 1, giving them time to buy the necessary shares.

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The share and unit price may have also gotten a lift after recent Global Dairy Trade auctions showed dairy prices remain resilient despite global trade tensions.

Last week, the GDT price index rose 0.2 per cent from the previous auction two weeks prior. The average price was US$3,306 a tonne, compared with US$3,303 a tonne two weeks earlier.

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