The New Zealand Herald

M. bovis challenge for livestock company

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Allied Farmers expects the outbreak of Mycoplasma bovis, and efforts to contain the cattle disease, will slow down activity in its core livestock division.

The Hawera-based company’s livestock unit increased stock sales 1 per cent in the year ended June 30, although lower internatio­nal meat prices shrank margins and the unit reported a 2.6 per cent decline in earnings to $2.6 million.

Chair Garry Bluett said the company was always going to struggle to repeat the “exceptiona­l growth” from the year earlier and noted the M.bovis outbreak will pose a number of challenges for the rural services firm.

“While the planned eradicatio­n program will see a demand for livestock and possible opportunit­ies, the uncertaint­ies around livestock movements could cause some general slowdown in ordinary livestock transactio­ns,” he said in a statement.

“At this stage it is too early to assess any financial impact.”

Allied Farmers’ net profit was largely flat at $1.5m in the year ended June 30, boosted by its $441,000 share of proceeds from a lawsuit taken by the liquidator of Dave Henderson’s Property Ventures Ltd.

The company was a beneficiar­y of the litigation against PVL after selling various loans to the litigation funders in 2013.

The company took on the loans in its 2009 acquisitio­n of the Hanover and United finance group’s loan book wasn’t worth as much as initially thought. It sold them for $100,000, and had said it could rise to $500,000 or more.

The additional payment was contingent on a successful lawsuit. Liquidator Robert Walker, backed by litigation funder LPF Group, settled with auditor Pricewater­houseCoope­rs and went on to discontinu­e pursuing Henderson and his fellow directors.

Allied Farmers has been focusing on its livestock division, having largely wound down the residual assets from its acquisitio­n of the Hanover and United Finance loan books in 2009.

The company has set up a livestock financing division, which Bluett said “performed creditably — ahead of the budgets set”.

The unit, initially focusing on financing service bulls, has branched out into general livestock lending. As at June 30, its loan book was $4.6m, up from $2.1m a year earlier.

The shares last traded at 8 cents and have declined 17 per cent so far this year. The board didn’t declare a dividend.

 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ??
Photo / Brett Phibbs

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