Fonterra Corporate 2010
Transcription
Fonterra Corporate 2010
Strategic Update September 2011 CLSA ASIA Conference Fonterra Co-operative Group Ltd Introducing Fonterra Revenue - 2010 Sales by Geography Europe 6% • Fonterra is the world’s largest processor of milk in the world Consumer 33% • Leader in consumer branded dairy foods in Australia, New Zealand, Chile and selected Asian markets • Co-operative owned by 10,500 farmers China 9% Asia 29% USA 8% Standard & Premium Ingredients 67% • Enterprise value of NZ$13 billion* • Market capitalisation of NZ$8 billion* Rest of the World 27% NZ 8% Australia 13% • Sales to more than 140 countries • 16,000 employees • Rated A+/Stable by S&P and AA-/Stable by Fitch • Approx. 25% of New Zealand’s export earnings * Independent Valuation as at 31 May 2011 Page 2 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group World’s largest exporter of whole milk powder (WMP) Page 3 Confidential to Fonterra Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Worldwide locations Joint venture to produce whey proteins for Fonterra JV with Royal Friesland Campina for the supply of pharmaceutical lactose Partnership with DFA in manufacturing assets within North America (9 manufacturing sites & approx.1 billion litres of milk) Dairy America – valued relationship with Dairy America to export their SMP Algeria Egypt Jamaica Saudi Arabia Selangor & Solvite in Malaysia DPA Colombia Sri Lanka DPA Venezuela DPA Ecuador 10 Countries across Asia DPA Brazil Clover – agreement with South Africa’s largest dairy company to explore dairy opportunities in Sub Saharan Africa Milk Source Mauritius Processing Australia (12 manufacturing sites approx. 2 billion litres of milk) New Zealand (27 manufacturing sites approx 15 billion litres of milk) Dairy Partners America – alliance with Nestle to establish, JVs in dairy businesses across the America’s (13 manufacturing sites & approx. 3 billion litres of milk) DPA Argentina Consumer Page 4 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Market leading businesses Standard & Premium Ingredients ANZ Standard dairy ingredients (e.g. milk powders, cheese, butter) Leading consumer dairy food brands in Australia and New Zealand Premium dairy ingredients (e.g. sales from innovation, pharmaceutical lactose, paediatric applications, food services etc) Manufactures standard ingredients from milk sourced in Australia Asia/AME Latam Leading market positions in adult nutrition and other high margin categories across key markets in Asia Leading integrated dairy business in Chile (Soprole). Strong market position in consumer and standard ingredients manufacturing Joint venture with Nestle (Dairy Partners of America) Joint ventures in the US and Europe Page 5 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Sales & underlying EBIT by business segment Segment Revenue ($m) STANDARD & PREMIUM INGREDIENTS Underlying EBIT ($m) 316 12,757 548 12,006 299 3,803 ANZ 248 3,818 ASIA/AME 166 1,537 120 1,705 LATAM 738 119 798 106 FY10 FY09 Page 6 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Fonterra’s growth model Customer Centric Mature Markets Processing of NZ Milk to dairy ingredients Breadth and scale advantages Emerging Markets Accelerate growth in emerging markets Flexibility and growth options GlobalDairy Trade Page 7 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Snapshot of global milk production and consumption 88 88 74 76 149 135 135 135 Rest of Europe USA/Canada 29 32 32 48 58 China 43 EU 27 70 73 Middle East & North Africa India Rest of Asia 18 21 Rest of Africa 29 Latin America 7 ANZ Milk Production 2009 (million MT) Milk Consumption 2009 (million MT) Sources: Fonterra analysis (Commercial Forecasting). Standardised Milk Equivalent (ME) basis [7.4 MT of ME = 1MT of WMP] Page 8 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Emerging markets key driver of export demand Net Trade in Dairy, 2010 3.4 14.6 17.8 12.1 Russia 0.7 4.1 0.6 3.4 2.2 Canada Other Europe 0.9 0.1 India USA 3.2 2.5 0.4 Mexico Brazil 1.8 Source – Fonterra Other Africa 8.5 South Korea Middle East North Africa 1.0 1.4 Units – million tonnes of milk equivalents EU27 Japan China 2.8 Uruguay Other Asia Other Latam Argentina Net Exports New Zealand Australia Net Imports Page 9 9 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Emerging markets demand expected to grow over next decade +13 +11 USA/Canada +10 -0.4 Rest of Europe +35 +36 +5.8 +6.3 EU 27 +42 +45 China +8.5 +13 Middle East & North Africa India +12 +19 Rest of Asia +5.6 +8.0 +16 +18 Rest of Africa Latin America +5.8 +1.5 ANZ Milk Production Growth to 2019 (million MT) Milk Consumption Growth to 2019 (million MT) Sources: Fonterra analysis (Commercial Forecasting). Standardised Milk Equivalent (ME) basis [7.4 MT of ME = 1MT of WMP] Page 10 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Becoming the natural source of premium ingredients for global food companies Cultured foods Beverages Bars and snack foods Paediatric nutrition Ingredients for cheese Cheese for meals Medical beverages Organics Page 11 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Well balanced portfolio of brands and emerging/mature market exposure Page 12 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Consumer operations have strong track record Normalised EBIT $m 700 CAGR 19% 584 600 474 500 400 392 332 300 200 100 0 2007 1. 2. 2008 2 2009 2010 Combined ANZ/AME/Latam segment Normalised EBIT (adjusted for non-recurring items and impairment of equity accounted investees). 12 month period (unaudited, sourced from management information). Page 13 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Capital Structure Evolution • At a special meeting in June 2010, shareholders voted in favour to changes to the Cooperative’s constitution that allow steps to be taken to implement Trading Among Farmers • Under Trading Among Farmers, farmers will be able to buy and sell shares from one another rather than via Fonterra • The market will be a registered exchange in New Zealand owned by Fonterra • Additionally, the public will be able to invest in a limited number of units that have the same economic entitlement as shares, but will have no voting rights in respect of the Co-operative • Shareholders have given the Fonterra Board a mandate to implement Trading Among Farmers subject to the satisfaction of certain pre-conditions • Trading Among Farmers also requires legislation to be introduced by the New Zealand Government Page 14 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Summary • Breadth and scale advantages – investing to achieve unmatched efficiencies – largest and most efficient milk powder plants in the world – streamlining our global supply chain • Accelerate growth in emerging markets – milk consumption expected to outstrip local production in emerging markets – proven ability to grow in dynamic fast growing emerging regions • Flexibility and growth options – reshaping the way standard dairy ingredients are traded globally (GlobalDairyTrade) – commitment to dairy-based research puts us at the forefront of breakthrough uses of dairy – building product optimisation and risk management capabilities Page 15 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Supplementary Information Page 16 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group FY10 financial result snapshot 2010 $m 2009 $m (restated1) Revenue 16,726 16,035 691 4% Cost of Milk2 (7,664) (5,793) (1,871) (32%) Other purchases/inventory movement/supplier premiums (6,311) (7,424) 1,113 15% Operating expenses (1,999) (2,036) (37) (2%) 277 119 158 133% EBIT3 1,078 990 88 9% Net finance costs (313) (448) (135) (30%) Tax (80) 681 (148) N/A Profit after tax 685 610 75 12% Other operating income 1. 2. 3. Movement $m Movement % The Group has changed its accounting policy to recognise the tax effect of distributions to shareholders within the tax expense line in the income statement. As a result of this change, the tax effect of distributions to Shareholders of $177 million recognised in equity for the year ended 31 July 2009 is now presented on the income statement. The milk season runs from 1 June to 31 May. The Cost of Milk sold represents the Cost of Milk collected from suppliers for the season. Adjustments for the 1 June to 31 July period to align the milk season with the financial year are made in the other purchases and inventory movement line. Operating Profit, plus share of equity accounted earnings (2010: $56m; 2009: $129m) less impairment of equity accounted investees (2010: nil; 2009: $61 million). Page 17 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group FY10 Normalised EBIT 2010 $m 2009 $m Reported EBIT1 1,078 990 Non-recurring items (174) (32) – 61 904 1,019 Impairment of equity accounted investees Normalised EBIT 1. Reported EBIT includes non-recurring items and impairment of equity accounted investees. Page 18 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group 27 sites around New Zealand • Annual milk volume of: – 15 billion litres • Over 70 million litres of milk per day at peak: • 2.4 million tonnes of product made per year in New Zealand • New greenfields site in the South Island under construction Page 19 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group GlobalDairyTrade trade weighted index Price Index (March 2010 = 1000) 1,750 1,500 1,250 1,000 750 500 250 GDT-TWI™ Real GDT-TWI™ 10 Year Average Real GDT-TWI Sources: GlobalDairyTrade, Global Trade Atlas, USDA DMN, USDL BLS Page 20 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group GDT TWI compared to other commodities Page 21 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Milk Price Calculation • Sample of Fonterra’s actual sales prices of Reference Commodity Products scaled up to reflect milk price volumes for period (moving to increasing/sole reliance on globalDairyTrade) • Key inputs include product streams and sales phasing • Operating costs calculated as manufacturer’s specification of resource usage for modern powder plants but with Fonterra’s unit costs, collection costs and supply chain costs (supply chain costs assume that Milk Price business doesn’t have offshore network) • Overheads are based on Fonterra’s costs, but reflect narrower scope of Milk Price Business OPERATING & OVERHEAD COSTS REASONABLE RATE OF RETURN EXISTING ASSETS ASSET BASE CAPITAL EXPENDITURE REVENUE DEPRECIATION, NET OF REVALUATIONS CAPITAL RECOVERY Annual Aggregate Milk Price Page 22 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group Gearing has improved substantially 59.6% 60% • 57.6% 48.5% at 31 Jan 11 vs 54.3% at 31 Jan 10 • 54.3% 55% 53.0% Half year comparison more relevant than full year because of seasonality factors KEY DRIVERS 50% 48.5% 44.9% 45% • Share issues • Dividend Policy • Interim profit recorded 40% Jul-08 Jan-09 Jul-09 Jan-10 Jul-10 Jan-11 Gearing is measured in terms of economic net interest bearing debt over economic net interest bearing debt plus equity (reflecting the effect of debt hedging in place at balance date). Page 23 Confidential to Fonterra Co-operative Group