Wednesday, 20 November 2013 09:50

Dairy debt ok – banker

Written by 

THE ANZ Bank’s head of agri and commercial, Graham Turley, says farmers appear to be concentrating on profitability, which will help mitigate some of the Reserve Bank’s concern about the high level of debt in the dairy sector.

 

Reserve Bank deputy governor Grant Spencer says high debt in the dairy sector is a risk to New Zealand’s financial stability, as is the high level of external indebtedness.

He says that while the dairy sector is currently enjoying record prices, its high level of indebtedness makes it vulnerable to a fall in commodity prices or an increase in interest rates. In recent years dairy farmers have taken a more cautious approach to investment and this will need to continue to help mitigate any risk, he says.

MPI made a similar point in June when it noted that about half of the $30 billion debt in the sector was held by just 10% of farmers. 

Turley says in the last couple of years dairy farmers have become more focused on and better at financial management.  Until recently, few farmers would have been able to produce spread sheets with data on cashflows, financials, milk solids per cow and hectares and other data.  But the financial skills of progressive farmers have increased significantly, he says. 

“Certainly, we can expect to see continued volatility in commodity prices, but every review of the rural sector shows improvements in farm business management and efficiency,” he told Rural News. “Reinvestment by farmers is driving farm profitability, rather than solely commodity prices. Last year, for example, the dairy industry invested $1.2 billion in driving farm productivity.” 

Turley says the ANZ Privately Owned Business Barometer survey shows an emerging focus on profitability is driving the decision-making of leaders in all sectors of agribusiness. 

“This signals a move from farming for capital gain, based on land acquisition, to decision-making focused more on investment. This new model is more concerned with cash flow and sustainable growth, and careful consideration of return on investment.  More farmers in all agri sectors are now talking about profit performance, where before they talked about hectares, stock numbers and production numbers.” 

According to Turley, debt is a reflection of confidence by the farming sector in the opportunities available to New Zealand primary exporters and recognition of the need to invest and expand to take advantage of those opportunities. 

“The recent Greener Pastures report by ANZ found that New Zealand has the potential to capture $1.3 trillion more in agricultural exports between now and 2050. However, it is a conditional opportunity. Constraints on capital, skills, R&D and extension services, land access, supply chain costs and market access will need to be overcome.” 

Turley says if farmers don’t invest in this capability, New Zealand will become less competitive against other primary producing nations who will challenge our position in the decades ahead.

More like this

Sharemilker completes the trifecta

The major winners in the 2024 West Coast/Top of the South Share Farmer of the Year award, Michael and Cheryl Shearer were happy to complete the trifecta.

LCAs tackle false narratives

The quest to measure, report and make sense of the energy that goes into food production has come a long way in the past 25 years.

Featured

Fonterra trims board size

Fonterra’s board has been reduced to nine - comprising six farmer-elected and three appointed directors.

Boost for hort exports

The horticulture sector is a big winner from recent free trade deals sealed with the Gulf states, says Associate Agriculture Minister Nicola Grigg.

Better animal genetic gain system

A governance group has been formed, following extensive sector consultation, to implement the recommendations from the Industry Working Group's (IWG) final report and is said to be forming a 'road map' for improving New Zealand's animal genetic gain system.

National

The show is on!

It was bringing in a new Canterbury A&P Association (CAPA) show board, more in tune with the CAPA general committee,…

Machinery & Products

An ideal solution for larger farms

Designed specifically for large farms that want to drill with maximum flexibility, efficiency and power, the new Lemken Solitair ST…

Landpower increases its offering

Landpower and the Claas Harvest Centre network will launch the Claas Scorpion and Torion material handling solutions to the market…

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Leaky waka

OPINION: Was the ASB Economic Weekly throwing shade on Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr when reporting on his speech in…

Know-it-alls

OPINION: A reader recently had a shot at the various armchair critics that she judged to be more than a…

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter