LIC Expands Into Indonesia With First Dairy Genetics Sale
Herd improvement company LIC has entered the Indonesian market.
More dairy farmers are opting for artificial breeding (AB), boosting sales for LIC.
The co-op has recorded a 5% lift in revenue to $161 million for the half year ending November 30, 2018.
AB sales were up on the previous year as more farmers extended their farm’s AB period and opted for short gestation genetics over natural mating bulls, says chairman Murray King.
NZ-wide 36% more farms adopted all-AB mating than the previous year, the biggest spike the co-op has seen in the emerging no-bull trend, he says.
“This is partly due to the heightened biosecurity focus from M. bovis but with the demand we’ve seen for other solutions it’s evident farmers are looking for opportunities to maximise their profitability and productivity.”
Sales of LIC’s products were strong in NZ, including its DNA testing service; more farmers used the service to confirm parentage of their young stock and identify the best herd replacements for productivity.
LIC’s earnings before tax for the six months reached $59.3m and net profit jumped 117% -- from $15m last year to $32.8m.
King said the half-year result reflected recurring benefits from the cooperative’s business transformation, which improved business performance and profitability.
The co-op maintained R&D spending to commercialise high-value genetics and technology products for its farmers.
The half-year results include most AB and herd testing revenues but not a similar proportion of total costs, so are not indicative of the second half, nor the full year, result. No dividend is declared at half year.
King expects the co-op’s transformation to continue improving earnings.
“LIC’s refreshed business strategy to deliver innovation-led growth by focusing on optimising and enhancing our core business will build on our transformation to keep LIC and our customers as leaders of the global pastoral dairy system.
“The strategy is also critical to a modern, progressive cooperative that can meet the needs of its customers and the challenges in the broader industry by continually adapting and improving.
“Total cow numbers in the national dairy herd are steady, but our focus on driving value for farmers from our core products through innovation is delivering more value as farmers invest in new genetic products to fasttrack genetic gain within their herds and meet changing market demands,” King says.
$800k
LIC spent at least $800,000 on new measures to protect customers from M. bovis.
They included a world-leading daily testing regime of its bulls through the peak mating period.
Chairman Murray King says the co-op absorbed these costs to avoid more price increases.
Innovations
LIC’s ‘A2 BULL team’ was introduced to meet growing demand for A2 milk last year.
Chairman Murray King says the bulls were in high demand, accounting for 10% of total AB sales in its debut season as more farmers look to breed an A2 herd.
“LIC also saw strong uptake of its premium genetics product -- the Forward Pack bull team -- which provides access to elite new genetics earlier to increase the rate of genetic gain onfarm,” he says.
During the year LIC continued implementing and improving its SPACE service, which measures pasture via satellite imagery and algorithms. The system is now used by at least 1200 farmers in Southland, South Otago, Canterbury, Manawatu, Waikato and Bay of Plenty.
Āta Regenerative is bringing international expertise to New Zealand to help farmers respond to growing soil and water challenges, as environmental monitoring identifies declining ecosystem function and reduced water-holding capacity across farms.
Yili's New Zealand businesses have reported record profits following a major organisational and strategic transformation.
Owners and lessees of certain Hino Trucks New Zealand diesel vehicles have just 10 days remaining to register or opt out of a proposed $10.9 million class action settlement.
Silver Fern Farms has successfully produced and delivered 90 tonnes of premium chilled New Zealand lamb and beef to the United Arab Emirates via airfreight.
For the first three months of 2026, new tractor deliveries saw an increase over the previous two months, resulting in year-to-date deliveries climbing to 649 units - around 5% ahead of the same period in 2025.
QU Dongyu, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), has issued a warning saying that global fertiliser scarcity caused by disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz will lead to lower yields and tightening food supplies into 2027.