The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Distorted view after incentives

- With Brian Watts

Now that the long hours have passed for another year, crops harvested, stored or sold, dollars in the bank or on the way, what next?

Many will be planning ahead to the next cropping season after a few weeks off, hopefully.

Some might wonder was it all worthwhile and be asking what was the ‘bottom line’ for all the effort?

For many, on receiving their tax and profit statements, the first question will be, ‘how much tax?’.

Many will also ask, ‘how did our farm go despite having a good feel overall based on yields and prices?’.

For many, looking at the profit or loss report, P and L, and-or the tax return will not answer that question.

Why is this so? Often the profit for ‘tax’ purposes will be very different to the bottom line in the P and L, being out by ‘big’ – thousands – dollars.

Depreciati­on is a ‘book entry’ and rarely reflects the real ‘loss of value’ to the farming plant owned by a farming family.

At 30 percent and now at a 100 percent writeoff until June 30, 2022 under the ‘COVID-19 economic incentives’, it will lead to distorted results.

Sales of grain after June 30; stocks of grain in silos, wool held over until after June 30, no dollar value placed on farming family labour unless they are employed by the farm business, livestock valued at $4 at birth very conservati­vely valued, to name a few.

The median farm in our 2019 Wimmera farming KPI report had $8.2-million dollars of assets being managed; the median return on assets under management was 1.49 percent.

Returns ranged from a high of 14 percent back to a minus two percent.

These returns are on significan­t investment­s. Comparativ­e returns are available against other options and most are aware of these.

With farming, we all are aware that taking one year alone can be very misleading, hence we tend to look at five-year rolling averages. This was 2.3 percent.

Taking a closer look at Wimmera farms, consider what can be done?

Some are under performers and others are high achieving.

We simply divide the sample into four quarters; the first being the top 25 percent and so on.

This then tells us the strengths and weakness for 17 different areas – we now have a report on each farm’s strengths and weaknesses. The ‘lights are then turned on’ as we then are aware of what to work on if improvemen­t is the goal. So, returning to the start of this article. Having removed the anomalies from the P and L and tax returns as listed, our Wimmera Farm KPI Reports provide 17 realistic answers to, ‘Are we in the top half or in the lower half?’.

Not bad informatio­n to be had if one wants to get a fair return on their farm investment.

Most have heard of ‘cost benefit’ appraisal. With the knowledge of a farm’s strengths and any weaknesses on 17 different fronts, Wimmera farmers can then follow a simple process to turn things around.

Many in business will have used the ‘stop, start, continue’ process to improve.

Farmers will be doing this every day, they will stop what did not work, continue those practices that were successful, and start some that have been found to be helpful for other farmers or by their advisers.

Simply select an aspect that needs improvemen­t – low-half KPI – and follow this process.

Inputs, timing, crop selection, harvest, storage and marketing are just a few topics that can be ‘worked’ on using this process to build on strengths and make changes to remove the weaknesses.

The Wimmera Farm KPI Report for 2020 will provide guidance on what to work on.

For readers of The Weekly Advertiser, Watts Price Accountant­s will provide a free comprehens­ive report to the first five Wimmera farms to contact us at 44 Wilson Street, Horsham. Phone 5382 3001 and mention this article and special offer. • Watts Price Accountant­s of Horsham started reporting on Wimmera Farm Performanc­e in 1991. Work on the 30th report, for the 2020 financial year, is in progress. Any Wimmera farm is welcome to be involved in the 2020 report and receive a comprehens­ive report on 17 KPIS for 2020. Five-year rolling averages for those 17 KPIS can be available on request.

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