Friday, April 26, 2024

Westland lifts payout forecast

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Westland Milk Products has lifted its prediction for the 2015-16 season to $5.60-$6/kg milksolids (MS) but chief executive Rod Quin says the New Zealand dairy industry is in “uncharted territory”.
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It has also has confirmed its payout to shareholders for the 2014-15 season is unchanged at $4.90-$5.10/kg MS before retentions.

Westland chief executive Rod Quin said the 2015-16 budget represented a balance of many factors.

“While it might be more optimistic than some in the NZ dairy industry, it is our considered forecast of the expected outcomes for the approaching season.”

While Westland expected dairy prices to recover as the 2015-16 season progressed, Quin said they were expected to remain relatively low due to ongoing milk supply pressure from the United States and the European Union. One bright spot is that Chinese whole milk powder buyers were expected to return with more demand in early 2016.

“The reality for the dairy industry,” Quin said, “is that we are in uncharted territory, with at least three major changes impacting global dynamics:

1. The removal of EU milk quotas after 30 years, but the retention of their protectionist import duties;

2. Ongoing sanctions against Russia and;

3. Lower demand from China, with high imported stocks overhanging the market and growth in Chinese milk production.

“In any single season, one of these factors would cause major uncertainty. It is the combination of all three occurring within this season, with impacts into 2015-16, that has created global disruption.”

Quin said Westland considered all these factors in setting its budget. The company expected prices to start on the road to recovery later in 2015 and Chinese customers to increase demand early in 2016.

“That said, we don’t expect large price increases, rather a recovery for milk powders by the end of the season to a figure around US$3000/tonne.

He said Westland would start the 2015-16 season with a higher than usual advance payout of $4.40/kg MS, against a traditional approach of $3.85/kg MS.

“This is based on the expected need for cash required on farms to keep milk production as high as possible, while the company has robust cash flows and manageable working capital headroom.”

Westland’s increasing move into nutritional products was also a factor in the co-operative’s higher predictions for 2015-16, as increasing levels of value-added production drove higher and more sustainable pay-outs. Included in the budget were the third season of nutritional production from Dryer 6 and the first season of nutritionals from Dryer 7, limited sales from the new UHT plant at Rolleston, and higher returns from Westland’s EasiYo subsidiary.

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