Australia's Largest Dairy Processor Cuts Profit Forecast
April 26 2016 - 11:20PM
Dow Jones News
HONG KONG—The listed shares of Australia's largest dairy
processor Murray Goulburn Co-Operative Co. dropped sharply after
the company reduced its net-profit forecast due to the stronger
Australian dollar, low commodity prices and a fall in demand for
its higher-margin products.
Net profit for the year to June 30 2016 is now expected to be
between 39 million Australian dollars (US$30 million) and A$42
million dollars, the company said in a statement. In February the
company said it expected net profit of approximately A$63
million.
While not listed, the cooperative has listed a nonvoting trust
on the Australian Stock Exchange which provides investors with
exposure to the company and pays dividends while leaving control of
the 100-year dairy company in the hands of its more than 2,600
farmer shareholders.
Shares in the MG Unit trust resumed trading Wednesday morning,
falling to A$1.40 from A$2.14 before the trust's trading suspension
last week.
The dairy company, which processes more than a third of
Australia's milk, is a victim of the continuing slump in dairy
prices over the last two years which is causing issues for farmers
across the globe, as returns fall below the cost of production.
The GlobalDairyTrade index, widely considered a market reference
price for dairy products, is now less than half of what it was at
its peak in 2014 with the index currently at US$2,263 a metric
ton.
The slump is due to subdued demand from important markets such
as China and the Middle East, a glut sparked by Russia's ban on
U.S. and European food imports, and world-wide overproduction
partly due to the removal of quotas on dairy production in the
European Union.
Murray Goulburn has also revised what it expects to pay its
farmers for their milk for the year, to between A$4.75 and A$5.00 a
kilogram of milk solid down from the previous forecast payout of
A$5.60 a kilogram of milk solid. However, the company has
introduced a package to support farmers which will see farmers
receive the cash equivalent of A$5.47 a kilogram of milk solid.
Following the announcement both Murray Goulburn's managing
director Gary Helou and chief financial officer Brad Hingle
resigned from their positions, although they will remain with the
company to help with the transition.
Write to Lucy Craymer at Lucy.Craymer@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 27, 2016 00:05 ET (04:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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