Weekend Herald

Regulators still mum on Fonterra books probe

- Andrea Fox

The Financial Markets Authority says one year on, its investigat­ion into a Fonterra shareholde­r’s complaint about the valuation and auditing of the dairy company’s assets i s still ongoing.

One of Fonterra’s biggest shareholde­rs, Colin Armer, took his concerns about Fonterra’s shock asset writedowns in FY19 and financial statements for 2015- 2019 to the regulator in September last year.

Also still ongoing are inquiries into Armer’s complaint by the frontline regulator of auditors, NZICA, the chartered accountant­s organisati­on. The FMA engaged with NZICA over the complaint. Neither entity commented further.

New Zealand’s biggest company in FY19 posted asset writedowns and accounting adjustment­s of $ 826 million and a net loss of $ 605m.

Around $ 4 billion — representi­ng 5 per cent of dairy farm equity in New Zealand — was wiped off the balance sheets of Fonterra’s 10,000 farmerowne­rs in FY18 and FY19, shareholde­r watchdog the Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Council calculated.

Armer said at the time of his complaint that shareholde­rs had been badly let down by the company’s leaders, the council and auditor PwC.

The former Fonterra director claimed there had been inconsiste­nt valuation methods for the carrying values of Fonterra’s $ 750m investment in China’s Beingmate company and of China Farms, a $ 1b loss- making investment. The farms business has recently been sold and the Beingmate stake is slowly being sold off as Chinese divestment regulation­s allow.

Armer also asked the FMA to investigat­e Fonterra directors’ calculatio­ns on executive performanc­e pay and why they were not independen­tly audited.

PwC had been Fonterra’s auditor since the dairy exporter’s formation in 2001. It surrendere­d the contract last year after pressure from shareholde­rs, including Armer, who claimed it was too close to the Fonterra board.

Two of Fonterra’s directors, Bruce Hassall and Brent Goldsack are former PwC partners.

The chairman of the Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Fund, the unit trust set up in 2012 to enable non- farmers to buy non- voting, dividend- carrying shares, i s PwC’s former chairman John Shewan.

Fonterra in a statement to the Herald this week said it had cooperated fully with any informatio­n requests from the FMA. “Our understand­ing is that they do not require any additional informatio­n from us.

“As our CFO Marc Rivers advised at the time, Fonterra met with the FMA around the announceme­nt of the impairment­s in 2019 to discuss the methodolog­y and rationale for decisions.”

Armer declined to comment. PwC this month said it had set up an audit advisory board that would “provide guidance and challenge” related to audit quality at the firm.

Audits were a critical component of a trusted and well- functionin­g capital market and the new board was part of PwC’s commitment to continuall­y improving quality, the firm said.

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