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Home / The Country / Opinion

Fonterra’s misguided proposal to sell consumer brands - Clive Elliott

By Clive Elliott KC
NZ Herald·
13 Feb, 2025 01:57 AM4 mins to read

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Fonterra has proposed selling a number of its New Zealand consumer brands, including Anchor. Photo / NZME

Fonterra has proposed selling a number of its New Zealand consumer brands, including Anchor. Photo / NZME

Opinion by Clive Elliott KC
Clive is a barrister who has acted for a number of large international and local companies including Unilever, Coca-Cola and Cadbury

THREE KEY FACTS:

  • Fonterra has proposed selling a number of iconic New Zealand brands, including Anchor, Mainland, and Kāpiti.
  • The dairy giant sold Tip Top in 2019.
  • New Zealand has proximity to some of the world’s most dynamic markets, particularly in Asia.

On 21 November 2024, NZ Herald business writer Andrea Fox reported on Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell’s proposal to sell off a number of the company’s iconic New Zealand brands, including Anchor, Mainland, and Kāpiti.

This makes no sense.

The benefits of doing so are likely to be short-term and illusory.

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In my opinion, Fonterra should retain, nurture, and develop its valuable consumer brands rather than hawking them off to the highest bidder.

In my first job out of university, I was employed by the multinational company Unilever. I was fortunate because it gave me an insight into what branding and marketing strategies for fast-moving consumer goods are all about.

In those early days, I learned that Unilever’s focus has always been on brand equity: a strong commitment to innovation, a consumer-centric approach to its product range, and the development of strong, protectable, profitable brands.

It is no coincidence that Unilever has remained one of the world’s largest and most successful consumer goods companies, boasting a portfolio of flagship brands across food, beverages, home care, and personal care - for example, Dove beauty products, Lipton tea, Surf laundry products and Magnum ice cream to name a few.

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I mention ice cream because Fonterra recently owned New Zealand’s iconic ice cream brand, Tip Top — one of the country’s few examples of a successful value-added food business.

Sadly, it was sold off in 2019 when Fonterra decided it could no longer manage it effectively. At the time, Fonterra’s CEO reportedly said that it had to be sold because Fonterra “couldn’t do it justice.”

It looks like the current management can’t do justice to the rest of its established brands either. If this is the case, it is a worrying red flag.

Does it suggest that Fonterra has still not found a solution five years later so it can “do justice” to the rest of its portfolio of well-loved and established brands? Perhaps the time has come to ask whether Fonterra should reassess its long-term strategic thinking rather than take the easy way out and sell the company’s crown jewels.

In her article, Andrea Fox noted Fonterra’s argument that its consumer business has no competitive advantage, which is why it wants to get shot of it.

I’m afraid I have to disagree. There is no reason why Fonterra cannot replicate the success of multinational companies like Unilever and Nestlé.

New Zealand’s pristine, green reputation and strong social, and (at least until recently) environmental ethos give Fonterra a huge natural advantage. We also have significant scale and proximity to some of the world’s most dynamic markets, particularly in Asia.

The parallels between Fonterra’s potential and Unilever’s achievements are striking. By adopting a similarly strategic approach focused on marketing, innovation, and understanding consumer needs, there is no reason why Fonterra can’t just survive but prosper.

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What is needed, however, is determination and long-term strategic leadership.

In my view, our prosperity and ability to remain a first-world economy depends on our ability to add value to the product categories in which we excel rather than taking short-term fixes.

A pivot towards what is charitably described as a “global business-to-business supplier” of dairy nutrition products is ill-advised.

Putting the spin to one side, it means no longer supplying value-added branded products and instead becoming a stock standard commodity supplier.

And unfortunately, there are plenty of them around.

The result: our ability to add value to our established brands and sell them at a premium will be lost, potentially for good.

And, in my assessment, New Zealand dairy owners and the country as a whole will undoubtedly be the poorer for it.

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