Misguided campaign
OPINION: Last week, Greenpeace lit up Fonterra's Auckland headquarters with 'messages from the common people' - that the sector is polluting the environment.
HIGH COMMODITY prices doubled the annual profit of corporate farmer Rural Equities Ltd in the last financial year.
The company’s earnings at least doubled to $24 million on high prices for milk, beef and lamb; earnings before interest and tax reached $6.4m, compared to $3.3m the previous year.
Commenting in the 2013-14 annual report, REL chairman David Cushing says the substantial increase is primarily due to record milk production and milk price; performance gains and improved profitability from the group’s three directly managed Waikato sheep and beef properties also contributed.
REL owns 25 farms totalling 12,087ha, a mix of sheep and beef, dairy, deer and arable farms spread from northern Waikato to Southland. There are 14 properties in the South Island and 11 in the North Island; nine farms are directly managed comprising 5361ha.
Six of the directly managed farms are dairy farms, all with 50/50 sharemilkers, and the remaining three are the Waikato sheep and beef farms. The six dairy farms total 1190ha and milk about 3820 cows. The three Waikato group farms cover 4171ha and run 30,000 stock units.
Cushing says record milk production for the third successive year was achieved on the six dairy farms; the company supplies Fonterra and Synlait.
“We have completed a generally successful farming year. Although there was a significant autumn drought over much of the North Island, overall national climatic conditions were favourable,” he says.
Prices for wool and lamb lifted from the low levels experienced in the previous year and beef remained at attractive levels.
Fonterra’s final milk price for last season is $8.40/kgMS; Synlait paid its suppliers $8.27/kgMS.
Cushing says its two Canterbury dairy farms, Rocklea and Milford, switched to supplying milk to Synlait from August 2013; the four other dairy farms continue to supply Fonterra.
REL’s property values, including its sheep and beef farms, increased by $20m last year.
Cushing says the rural property market was again buoyant with further growth in values nationally, but especially in Canterbury and other dairy regions.
“Of particular note is the welcome lift in rural property values throughout the North Island and for sheep and beef properties generally. The value of these properties has largely been stable for several years and an increase in the value of the Hawke’s Bay and Waikato properties is pleasing.”
Investing in properties held to improve land use, value, earnings and the overall quality of the holding has been a long term strategy for the group, says Cushing.
The conversion of part of the Eiffelton property near Ashburton to a 233ha dairy unit milking up to 940 cows was confirmed during the year; milk production will start August 2015. Like its other Canterbury dairy farms Eiffelton will supply Synlait.
Cushing says the remaining 163ha of the Eiffelton property will provide grazing for replacement dairy stock and grow supplementary feed. It could also be converted to a dairy unit milking up to 650 cows. In the interim, the irrigation system on that block will be added to and upgraded.
Cushing says most of the development of the three Waikato sheep and beef farms is finished, except for fencing particularly at Waikoha.
Pasture renewal continues on all three farms: Annandale, Puketotara and Waikoha are run as a group – 4171ha running 30,000 stock units.
Cushing says two big summer and autumn droughts in a row have crimped productivity and earnings from these farms but production has kept improving.
The company paid a dividend of 7c/share this month; last year it paid 6c/share.
Federated Farmers president Wayne Langford says the 2025 Fieldays has been one of more positive he has attended.
A fundraiser dinner held in conjunction with Fieldays raised over $300,000 for the Rural Support Trust.
Recent results from its 2024 financial year has seen global farm machinery player John Deere record a significant slump in the profits of its agricultural division over the last year, with a 64% drop in the last quarter of the year, compared to that of 2023.
An agribusiness, helping to turn a long-standing animal welfare and waste issue into a high-value protein stream for the dairy and red meat sector, has picked up a top innovation award at Fieldays.
The Fieldays Innovation Award winners have been announced with Auckland’s Ruminant Biotech taking out the Prototype Award.
Following twelve years of litigation, a conclusion could be in sight of Waikato’s controversial Plan Change 1 (PC1).
OPINION: The Greens aren’t serious people when it comes to the economy, so let’s not spend too much on their…
OPINION: PM Chris Luxon is getting pinged lately for rolling out the old 'we're still a new government' line when…