AgFirst marks 30 years of agribusiness advice
AgFirst, New Zealand's largest independent agribusiness consultancy, is turning 30 - celebrating three decades of "trusted advice, practical solutions, and innovative thinking".
A dairy farm consultant says he is worried that this season’s low milk price will tip some young, innovative dairy farmers out of the industry.
James Allen, of AgFirst, Waikato, says the most vulnerable are new variable or lower order sharemilkers just starting in the industry. Allen did a study some years ago for DairyNZ on the state of sharemilking and is widely regarded as an expert in this area.
He says variable order sharemilkers in the 2013-14 season would have had the benefit of the higher $8.40 payout and the resulting retrospective payments. But he says those starting out in the past year and this new season wouldn’t have had the benefit of a good year.
“I feel very sorry for them because they have started out with an extremely low profit and in some cases a cash loss this year. My concern is how those guys are going to manage their cashflows to survive. We don’t want to lose good prospective farm owners,” he told Rural News.
Allen says the key issue with a variable order sharemilker agreement is that it’s a percentage based agreement and many of these were negotiated well in advance of the season when payout expectations were very good. He says the option of re-negotiating a contract is limited.
“There is no harm in bringing the situation up with the farm owner and seeing what capacity there is to renegotiate the contract. Of course, the farm owner is going through the same issues in terms of a drop in payout so they are going to be equally affected,” he explains.
“So at issue is the capacity and willingness of the other party to look at some sort of contract renegotiation but there are no guarantees or legal requirements to renegotiate.”
Allen says people who go sharemilking need to understand that by doing so they are accepting risk. He says the only alternative to mitigate such risk is to go to contract milking where people are not caught out by the low prices.
“Last year many of the contract milkers were feeling quite aggrieved about missing out on the $8.40 payout, but this year they are pretty happy about life.”
Allen says the key message is expect more volatility.
According to the most recent Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey, farmer confidence has inched higher, reaching its second highest reading in the last decade.
From 1 October, new livestock movement restrictions will be introduced in parts of Central Otago dealing with infected possums spreading bovine TB to livestock.
Phoebe Scherer, a technical manager from the Bay of Plenty, has won the 2025 Young Grower of the Year national title.
The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.
Award-winning boutique cheese company, Cranky Goat Ltd has gone into voluntary liquidation.
As an independent review of the National Pest Management Plan for TB finds the goal of complete eradication by 2055 is still valide, feedback is being sought on how to finish the job.
OPINION: For years, the ironically named Dr Mike Joy has used his position at Victoria University to wage an activist-style…
OPINION: A mate of yours truly has had an absolute gutsful of the activist group SAFE.