Otago Daily Times

Profits up at Westland Milk pretax

- BRENDON MCMAHON

HOKITKA: Westland Milk Products yesterday posted a beforetax profit of $3.25 million as it tries to claw its way to profitabil­ity.

Last year’s beforetax profit was just $29,000.

On releasing its annual report the West Coast farmerowne­d cooperativ­e acknowledg­ed it was still not industry competitiv­e and lacked ‘‘financial flexibilit­y’’ due to high debt levels and the need for more working capital.

The $3.25 million beforetax profit is partly down to book adjustment­s, including keeping back 5c for every kilo of the milk payout to farmers for 201718.

The $6.07 payout for the past year was up 89c on the previous year, but the company still had to improve the bottom line, chief financial officer Dorian Devers said.

‘‘Although we went some way to closing the gap between Westland’s payout and other dairy processors, there is still a gap, meaning our payout is still not competitiv­e,’ ’he said.

Total revenue was $692,586,000 for the past year. Of this, $386,032,000 was paid to farmers for their milk.

In a statement this morning, board chairman Peter Morrison said the primary focus was to deliver a competitiv­e payout next year and ‘‘get the basics right’’ to improve returns and value to shareholde­rs.

The company also needed to take up the full range of opportunit­ies with its need for more capital, he said.

Shareholde­rs will be given a first progress report on the capital restructur­e review now under way at the annual general meeting at Shantytown on December 5. The West Coast cooperativ­e could be sold off altogether or ownership watereddow­n with a new ‘‘cornerston­e’’ investor to bring new capital on board.

The company needed to ‘‘consider all the options’’ to attain a higher payout and improve financial flexibilit­y.

The company had increased its valueadd income by $15 million, ‘‘evidence that segregated, valueadd product can produce success’’, chief executive Toni Brendish said.

It had success in sales of goods that were less vulnerable to global price fluctuatio­ns. This included a 50.4% increase in sales of Westgold butter, UHT sales of 6.045 million litres compared to 1.024 million litres the year prior, and nutritiona­l milk product sales up 4543 metric tonnes. — Greymouth Star

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