Reserve Bank concerns about dairy farming debt appear to have eased as milk prices remain robust and farmers pay down debt, but an industry stress test paints a grim picture if prices slide for an
Dairy debt less of a concern to Reserve Bank as loans repaid with cream payouts
Andrea Fox
But Fonterra farmer-shareholders still remember with a shiver when their milk cash payment plunged from $8.50/kg in 2013-2014 to $4.65 in 2014-2015.
Global dairy demand continued to fizzle the following season pushing Fonterra's cash payout down further to $4.30kg.
Good prices leading up to the 2013 price dive had tempted many farmers to take on debt to expand - a temptation encouraged by banks.
The Reserve Bank report noted dairy farm debt to banks had fallen this year to just above $35 billion, down from a little over $40b in 2019.
The sector's lower exposure to risk was a result of banks having continued to diversify their lending away from dairy in favour of sheep and beef farming and horticulture.
China's rapid recovery from the pandemic had supported continued demand for New Zealand's key agricultural commodities.
"While demand for dairy has been the driving factor, stronger prices have recently also been recorded for meat and forestry products," the report said.
It shows total bank lending to sheep and beef farmers at just under $15b this year, while horticulture players have borrowed around $5b in total.
The report warned the agriculture sector faced several headwinds longer-term, including increased variation in climate conditions as climate change intensified.
"The expected full entry of the sector the Emissions Trading Scheme from 2025 will likely raise compliance costs, and weigh on profitability.
"Further potential risks such as surplus overseas milk production, the growth of milk alternatives, bovine and crop disease outbreaks, heavily concentrated export markets and geopolitical trade tensions have the potential to undermine commodity prices and sector prosperity."
Independent economist Cameron Bagrie told a recent DairyNZ forum dairy farmers were "very aggressively" paying down debt, a trend he expected to become more noticeable over the next six to eight months.
"The dairy sector is one of the few sectors in which I am seeing less points of vulnerability. Balance sheet imbalances are starting to be addressed and it's happening in an orderly fashion.
"But there's still a pocket of what banks call non-performing dairy loans - it's about 3 per cent.
"That trend hasn't changed in the last five years. That tells me there's a consistent group of underperformers or there are models that just do not work. Another eight per cent are defined as potentially stressed - that is they have a credit rating of B or below.
"So there's still a fair bit of work to be done."
Bagrie said one of the biggest economic lessons of 2020 and the pandemic was "thank God New Zealand was one big farm".
"We can't lose track of that. It was there when it was needed and it's going to be a pretty big part of New Zealand's economic future in a world that's changing rapidly."
Bagrie said he hoped sentiment in the farming sector over the coming 10 to 20 years would be more of a "half glass full" view than farmers were expressing at the moment.