fbpx
Print this page
Thursday, 05 February 2026 07:55

LIC lifts half-year revenue on strong demand for dairy genetics

Written by  Staff Reporters
LIC chief executive David Chin says the co-op remains focused on delivering long-term productivity gains for farmers. LIC chief executive David Chin says the co-op remains focused on delivering long-term productivity gains for farmers.

Herd improvement company LIC has posted a 5.2% lift in half-year revenue, thanks to increasing demand for genetics.

For the six months ending November 30, 2025, LIC's revenue topped $195 million, compared to $185m for the same period in 2024.

Underlying earnings reached $36.8m, up 9.3%. However, net profit after tax (NPAT) was down 13.5% to $33.8m.

Chief executive David Chin says increasing demand for sexed semen, animal health services and GeneMark Genomics reflects the increasing focus of farmers on genetic gain and their continued confidence in LIC's products and services.

"We're seeing encouraging growth in areas that matter most to our farmers," he says.

"As a generational co-operative we remain focused on delivering long-term productivity gains for farmers and supporting sustainable genetic progress for the New Zealand dairy herd."

He pointed out that NPAT was lower than the prior year, primarily due to the absence of last year's bull team revaluation gain and the costs incurred within the period for the multi-year investment to replace older technology and customer-facing systems.


Read More:


LIC chair Corrigan Sowman says while system investment has impacted short-term profitability, it positions LIC well for the future by improving resilience, capability and farmer experience.

"The co-operative's balance sheet remains strong, allowing us to invest into technology and infrastructure to support delivery of our future business strategy, to help farmer breed better cows faster."

LIC NZ operates four key business segments"

  • Market genetics: provides bovine genetic breeding material and related services, predominantly to dairy farmers
  • Testing: herd testing, on-farm support and DNA and animal health testing services
  • Farm software: data recording, tags and farm management information services
  • International: provides bovine genetic breeding material and related services to offshore markets

NZ market genetics business generated $116m in revenue, herd testing $36m, farm software $28m and international business $7m.

More like this

McClay: “Go hard, go fast!"

Opening a new $3 million methane research barn in Waikato this month, Agriculture Minister Todd McClay called on the dairy sector to “go as fast as you can and prove the concepts”.

Featured

2026 fresh produce trends shaping Kiwi food culture

According to the latest Fresh Produce Trend Report from United Fresh, 2026 will be a year where fruit and vegetables are shaped by cost pressures, rapid digital adoption, and a renewed focus on wellbeing at home.

Editorial: Having a rural voice

OPINION: The past few weeks have been tough on farms across the North Island: floods and storms have caused damage and disruption to families and businesses.

National

Machinery & Products