Reserve Bank rules bleeding farmers dry - Feds
There are calls for the Reserve Bank to drop its banking capital rules, which Federated Farmers says is costing farmers a fortune.
The Reserve Bank will release an updated stress analysis of the dairy sector this week.
But even the worst case scenarios pose no threat to bank stability, Reserve Bank governor Graeme Wheeler said, when he reduced the official cash rate (OCR) by 25 basis points to 2.25% last Thursday.
The outlook for global growth had deteriorated since December due to weaker growth in China and other emerging markets and slower growth in Europe, he said. Domestically the dairy sector faces difficult challenges, but domestic growth was supported by inward migration, tourism, construction and accommodative monetary policy.
"There are many risks to the outlook. Internationally, these are to the downside and relate to the prospects for global growth, particularly China, and the outlook for global financial markets," he said.
The dairy sector was among the main domestic risks which also included a decline in inflation expectations, the possibility of continued high net immigration and pressures in the housing market.
Wheeler said there was no question that dairy was a challenging sector -- particularly for dairy farmers. Whole milk powder prices were down 60% since February 2014.
The "dynamics were difficult internationally" with prices still up overseas, production growth in the US and Europe and the Russian embargo.
The Reserve Bank will release its updated report on stress in the dairy sector in its bulletin this week. Wheeler said they looked at a number of scenarios. After a lot of work with DairyNZ, analysis shows the average break-even price is about $5.30/kgMS.
Under the most stressed scenario, they modelled the current price staying there for the next three seasons. Farm prices would fall about 40%. Under that worst case model, 44% of the dairy debt would be impaired and the default rate would be 10-15% of dairy lending.
It is a highly stressed scenario, Wheeler said. Agricultural lending is 10% of bank lending and a lot is dairy.
"Do the banks have the capital reserves to accommodate that? We believe they do."
Wheeler said China is building up a number of imbalances that are serious but they don't see a "hard landing" there soon.
"If China had a significant and prolonged deflation it would inevitably spread deflation around the world," he said.
Any future cut, or more than one cut, will be based on data.
There were many risks to the outlook but New Zealand was in a better place than three years ago when it had deficits and the projection of debt increasing, he said.
New Zealand dairy farmers are set to be the first in the world to receive access to a new digital physical milk pricing tool that enables them to fix the price for their physical milk.
State farmer Pāmu is opening its farm gates this summer in an effort to give the rural sector the opportunity to see how large-scale, multi-system farming is delivering productivity and profitability across New Zealand.
A five-year study has found that the cost of reducing emissions without technology may be significant and unsustainable for Northland dairy farmers.
DairyNZ says Waikato farmers need certainty on Plan Change 1, but they say that certainty must be matched with practical, workable rules and a clear transition that doesn't get ahead of the new resource management system currently under review.
While the Government has moved quickly to make commercial hauliers' lot easier during the current fuel crisis, they appear to be stuck in the creep box when it comes to the agricultural industry.
Waikato farmers have been told that the Government’s new planning system legislation and the region’s Plan Change 1 (PC1) “won’t mesh together very well”.

OPINION: Central Hawke's Bay farmer Mark Warren recently told the Hawke's Bay Times it's time for a conversation about allowing…
OPINION: A nation that relies as heavily as NZ does on functional global shipping lanes will have to do its…