The New Zealand Herald

Fonterra secure in China strategy

Despite partner’s forecast loss doubling, dairy giant is confident in long-term outlook for Chinese market

- Jamie Gray agricultur­e editor jamie.gray@nzherald.co.nz

Fonterra is confident in its China strategy despite infant formula company Beingmate Baby & Child, in which it has an 18.8 per cent stake, saying losses for 2016 will be about double the previous forecast.

Shenzen-listed Beingmate said its loss for the year was now expected to come in at 750-800 million yuan ($150.8m to $160.9m) because of accounting adjustment­s and provisions for bad debt arising from its subsidiari­es.

Fonterra’s chief financial officer, Lukas Paravicini, said Beingmate’s recent performanc­e reflected China’s market conditions, “which remain challengin­g for all dairy players”.

“The long-term outlook remains strong with disposable incomes in China growing by 11.5 per cent a year since 2006, the relaxation of the one child policy taking effect and tightening brand regulation­s leading to the exit of many smaller competitor­s from the marketplac­e,” Paravicini said.

“We are confident in our overall China strategy, of which our Beingmate partnershi­p continues to be an important part.”

“Our partnershi­p with Beingmate is a long-term investment to grow in the domestic infant formula market,” he said.

“It also supports future ingredient sales of our NZMP brand from New Zealand, and our whey products from Australia and Europe.”

Distributi­on of Fonterra’s Anmum infant formula brand in China has grown from 60 cities in 2015 to more than 170 cities today.

Total sales were also ahead of projection­s, he said.

Beingmate last year forecast a loss of 380m yuan to 410m yuan, compared with a profit of 103.6m yuan in 2015.

Beingmate said its fourth quarter revenue and profitabil­ity showed a slight improvemen­t but that annual losses had become “more significan­t than previously expected”. Beingmate said that after discussion­s with its accounting firm, it had decided to reverse its cumulative deferred income tax assets of 300m yuan. In addition, it had made a provision for bad debt of its subsidiari­es that had suffered excess losses, to a total of 61m yuan.

“The performanc­e forecast correction is the result of preliminar­y estimate by [the] company’s financial department,” Beingmate said.

No further details were available, but Beingmate last year said it faced a fake infant formula scandal, as well as “industry disorder” in the fast-changing Chinese infant formula sector and new regulation, including a requiremen­t for brands to be registered with the China Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Nine people were arrested in China last April after more than 22,000 cans of counterfei­t infant formula were found being sold under the brands of Beingmate and Abbot Laboratori­es.

Beingmate said further details about the loss will be revealed when the company releases its annual report in March.

Fonterra’s tie-up with Beingmate, which operates four plants and 80,000 retail outlets across China, includes a distributi­on deal for Fonterra’s Anmum infant formula brand and a joint venture manufactur­ing operation at Darnum, in Victoria.

The loss will not affect Fonterra’s bottom line earnings but the company faces a loss on paper of $232.9m on the original purchase price of $754m, based on Beingmate’s decline in share price to 12.43 yuan from the purchase price of 18 yuan/share.

Fonterra said it would update farmer shareholde­rs about Beingmate when the co-op releases its first-half result in late March.

Harbour Asset Management analyst and director Oyvinn Rimer said Beingmate’s difficulti­es were not unique to the company.

“We have seen that other Chinese players are also facing some headwinds there as well,” Rimer said.

“It is an industry phenomenon but you can’t pinpoint exactly what is driving it because it differs from company to company,” Rimer said.

Beingmate was always going to be “interestin­g” because it is a minority shareholdi­ng, that does not give Fonterra any leverage to direct its investment.

“It probably does not look like the best use of money, but hindsight is a wonderful thing,” Rimer said.

“As it turns out, it doesn’t look like the stars have aligned just yet.”

Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Fund units have been on a firming trend since November, closing up 1c yesterday at $6.27 — up from $5.80 last November.

We are confident in our overall China strategy, of which our Beingmate partnershi­p continues to be an important part

Lukas Paravicini

 ??  ?? Fonterra CFO Lukas Paravicini says the conditions in China remain challengin­g for all dairy players.
Fonterra CFO Lukas Paravicini says the conditions in China remain challengin­g for all dairy players.

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