The New Zealand Herald

Fonterra posts big earnings rise

- Jamie Gray

Its milk price range for 2020/21 is big enough to drive a milk tanker through, but the once-troubled Fonterra has neverthele­ss gained credit for its financial performanc­e for the year to date.

The co-op, which last year turned in a record $605 million loss, said the group’s normalised earnings before interest and tax (Ebit) for the nine months to April 30 came to $815m, an increase of $301m on this time last year.

Fonterra’s earnings forecast for the current year to July has remained at 15-25 cents a share, but chief executive Miles Hurrell said he was confident the result would be at the upper end of that range.

The co-op’s net debt fell sharply to $5.7 billion from $7.4b a year earlier.

Fonterra has forecast a milk price for the coming year of $5.40-$6.90 per kg of milksolids, with a $6.15 midpoint.

The forecast for the current season, which ends on May 31, was at the lower end of a previously advised range, at $7.10-$7.30/kg.

Hurrell acknowledg­ed that the milk price range was big, but said it reflected the uncertain environmen­t the co-op faces, particular­ly since some of its key markets look likely to go into recession.

Unlike many New Zealand businesses right now, there will be no job losses.

Chris Lewis, Federated Farmers dairy chair, said the milk price range was “massive”.

Break-even for farmers is around $6.00/kg, so a milk price even at the mid-point would make life tough for farmers and their spending.

“It needs to be at $7.00 to make farms a viable long term business, not $6.15,” said Lewis.

But Lewis, who is an occasional critic of Fonterra, said it was a strong financial result. “These are credible numbers and not numbers that have been put through a PR machine.

“I think it should be celebrated that there are not many companies out there that have $800 million profits,” he said.

“That’s positive for the economy — by a country mile.”

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