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How farmers are dealing with volatility. Max Roberts Chairman. Volatility in the dairy industry. Volatility is nothing new for our industry High input industry that is highly exposed to trade 45% of production exported, significant imports
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How farmers are dealing with volatility Max Roberts Chairman
Volatility in the dairy industry • Volatility is nothing new for our industry • High input industry that is highly exposed to trade • 45% of production exported, significant imports • Farm gate prices are driven by international markets • International market accounts for just 7% of world milk production • Dairy trade is highly distorted by Nth Hemisphere policies • On farm, bought in feed accounts for 30% of cash costs • Subject to grain and hay market volatility
International dairy commodity prices Source: Dairy Australia
Income volatility – Source: ABARE
Income volatility –not just milk price Source: DA and ABARE
Volatility and uncertainty is increasing External environment Exchange rates Weather Inputs Grain Interest rates Farm Financial People Physical Govt policies Water Fuel Fertilizer Community attitudes Economic conditions New technologies
How are farmers dealing with volatility • Dairy is a highly adaptable production system • Water vs grain & supplements • Strategic use of inputs – water, fertiliser • Diversified feed sources – new supplements & crops • An integrated supply chain • Longer term strategic relationships – forward contracts • Options for selling milk - contract vs supply agreement • Relationship with dairy companies • Prioritising business resilience • Whole of farm planning and scenario testing • Production not the key objective • A longer term view of profitability and wealth creation
Increasing use of FMDs At 30 September 2009 3,707 dairy farmers held Farm Management Deposits totalling $214 million Source: DAFF
Rain-fed pasture Irrigated pasture Feedlot Supplementary grain & concentrate feeding Typical Australian dairy production system ? • A continuum of systems operating across Australia • Many farms feature elements of all these systems - more flexible and opportunistic
A range of feeding systems Source: National Dairy Farmer Survey 2009
How are farmers dealing with volatility • Highly adaptable production systems • An integrated supply chain • Prioritising business resilience
How is the industry responding? • Good risk management requires an understanding of the external environment • Dairy Moving Forward – Taking Stock • Dealing with Today, Planning for Tomorrow (DAFF) • DairyLIVE • Situation & Outlook • Grain & Hay report • Building capability • NCDEA • People in Dairy
Dairy Moving Forward – Taking Stock • 3000 Taking Stock sessions since 2004 • Service providers trained • Collaboration with • DAFF • DPIV • dairy companies • service providers
DairyLIVE • Linking the industry through technology • Cost effective • Access to international expertise • Funding from DAFF • Optimising networking and information reach
Situation and Outlook • Whole of supply chain analysis • Shared understanding of operating environment • Communicated via reports and presentations • Wide target audience • Farmers • Service providers • Government
Farmers dealing with volatility • The industry is developing the tools and information to help farmers: • Understand the context • Understand the total farm position • Test against potential scenarios to find the fault lines • Farmers are highly professional business owners • Employ 5 to 6 employees • Generate enormous economic benefits
The way forward • Opportunity is out there • The industry has proved it’s ability to compete and adapt • Well positioned to benefit from future demand growth • Farmers will continue to adapt to volatility • Farms must run as a business • Require clear signals and information • Continue to build capability • Policy settings will play an important role • Certainty of access to resources • Regulation