Fonterra undeterred by earnings hit as it pushes further into China

World’s largest dairy exporter, reports 41% fall in first-half earnings after higher input costs and a lack of processing capacity hit margins

A Fonterra milk tanker arrives to Fonterra’s Te Rapa plant near Hamilton,  New Zealand. Photograph: REUTERS/Nigel Marple/Files
A Fonterra milk tanker arrives to Fonterra’s Te Rapa plant near Hamilton, New Zealand. Photograph: REUTERS/Nigel Marple/Files

Fonterra, the world's largest dairy exporter, on Wednesday said a steep hit to its first-half earnings won't stop it from marketing more of its own-brand milk products in China and expand its food services business in the fast-growing market.

The New Zealand dairy co-operative on Wednesday reported a 41 per cent fall in first-half earnings after higher input costs from soaring global dairy prices and a lack of capacity to process record-high milk volumes into higher-yielding products hit its margins.

But the farmer-owned co-op is pushing on with plans to capitalise on increasing dairy demand from China and other countries, where growing middle classes are developing a voracious appetite for cheese, milk formula and other products.

Fonterra has the cash to fund its expansion plans in China after it raised 1.25 billion yuan in five-year “dim sum” bonds in January.

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In an interview, Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings said plans to build a UHT milk processing plant in China, which would be its first manufacturing plant in the company's largest export market, would likely be announced in 2014 or 2015.

“There’s definitely plans to go into UHT in China because that’s the way forward. Those plans you will see announced and coming to the table in the next financial year,” he said.

Fonterra collected roughly 12 billion litres of milk from its farmers in the six months to January 31st, around 60 per cent of which was processed into milk powder, mainly for wholesale export. Much of this goes to China to form the base of infant milk formula.

The company has been expanding its presence in the consumer brands and food services space, where it can earn fatter margins. Fonterra entered the Chinese market last year with Anchor-branded UHT milk and its Anmum infant formula products.

Mr Spierings said the company is also expanding its food services operations in China, where more than half of all the pizza sold in the country are topped with Fonterra cheese. The company supplies cream and butter to restaurants, hotels and fast-food restaurants in Beijing, Shanghai, and 18 other cities, doubling from two years ago.

Beyond China, it has begun construction of a $31 million plant in Indonesia that will package its Anmum, Anchor and Anlene products to sell in the southeast Asian country, a major importer of New Zealand milk powder.

Controlling about a third of global dairy exports, Fonterra should be flying high on the back of the “white gold” rush as it earns its best returns from milk powder, but all-time high world dairy prices have ramped up its input costs while it has struggled to meet demand due a lack of factory capacity.

Fonterra is obliged to buy milk collected by its farmer shareholders at historically high milk prices. What cannot be made into milk powder has been used for cheese products, which Fonterra said lost money over the period.

To ramp up production capabilities at home, the company is investing an additional 400-500 million New Zealand dollars to its capital expenditure plans over three years, which it said it would raise through borrowings.

On Wednesday, the company announced that normalised earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) fell to NZ$403 million for the first half, while net profit after tax fell 53 per cent to NZ$217 million.

The company cut its interim dividend to five NZ cents per share, and reaffirmed that it expected to pay a full-year dividend of 10 cents per share, down from 32 cents last year.

In December, Fonterra warned that it expected full-year earnings to fall to around NZ$500 million-NZ$600 million from last year’s NZ$1 billion.

Analysts said that the earnings fall reported on Wednesday showed that high dairy prices were hitting global operations.

“They reported the higher input costs, or the milk price, through margin compression across their different businesses,” ANZ rural economist Con Williams said.

The company faces a lawsuit from France's Danone, which is seeking compensation following last year's product recall. Fonterra said it had set aside an NZ$11 million provision for the issue as a legal obligation in its contracts with Danone. – Reuters