Herd about the 110% milk solids/liveweight goal?
Methven farmers Earl and Melissa McSweeney are breeders of one of LIC’s best KiwiCross sires, 523092 Plateau Dembe, son of popular 21-code bull Baldricks Spectacular.
LIC chairman Murray King says New Zealand dairy farmers must remain ambitious about maintaining their global edge in productivity and profitability.
Speaking at LIC’s annual meeting in Invercargill, King said NZ’s dairy industry is vulnerable to the same disruption other industries have experienced in recent years from new technology and innovation.
“There are also clear disruptive threats to the dairy industry and LIC from environmental challenges, to regulation, to alternative milk products.
“We have to be constantly improving and adapting the way we do business,” he says.
“Standing still is not an option. In this age of disruption and radical change if we don’t continue to evolve we put at risk what you value most about your co-op and the industry.”
It was the first time the farmer owned cooperative held its annual meeting in Southland, attended by local farmers, LIC directors, shareholder councillors and staff from the area and Waikato head office.
King outlined plans to protect and grow the co-op, and the roadmap for adapting to disruption. This included the separation of LIC into two businesses which was completed in 2016, the transformation programme now underway and defining the co-op’s core purpose.
“LIC is in a process of change and transformation. This is about protecting the fundamentals of the co-operative while making sufficient profits to enable LIC to reinvest for the future.
“The cost efficiencies and business growth delivered in the transformation programme have been key contributors toward a better result in the 2016-2017 financial year.
“As a result of the transformation we are also expecting a significant improvement in earnings in future years.”
The next step is share simplification. In response to concerns raised by shareholders, LIC began a comprehensive review of its share structure two years ago. This review found that the current two-share structure is not best for meeting the current and future needs of the cooperative and farmers.
“We believe that simplifying LIC’s share structure by moving to a single class of shares is an important step in better positioning LIC for the future and ensuring a resilient and adaptable co-op,” says King.
“The threat of disruption in the future means that we have to be able to respond in an agile way to changes and challenges that may lie ahead.
“Moving towards a simpler share structure will help in this process by addressing the growing disparity between LIC’s two classes of shares and making it easier in future to access capital if needed.”
The LIC board will update farmers next year; no final decision has been made.
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