Silver Fern Farms

Silver Fern Farms Limited
Company typeCompany
IndustryManufacturing, Food, livestock marketing & supply, Agribusiness
Founded30 September 1948 (1948-09-30)[1]
Headquarters,
ProductsMeat
SubsidiariesSilver Fern (brand)
Websitewww.silverfernfarms.com

Silver Fern Farms Limited is a New Zealand multinational meat company. It is owned in equal partnership by Silver Fern Farms Co-op Ltd, a cooperative of 16,000 New Zealand sheep, cattle and deer farmers and Shanghai Maling Aquarius Ltd. The company is New Zealand's largest livestock processing and marketing company. It has investments in manufacturing, meat processing, transport of live stock, export logistics and meat marketing, with associated companies including, New Zealand and Australian Lamb Company Limited, The Lamb Co-Operative, Inc, Robotic Technologies Limited, Livestock Logistics Nationwide Limited. Kotahi Logistics LP, Ovine Automation Limited, FarmIQ Systems Ltd, Primary Collaboration NZ Ltd and the Red Meat Profit Partnership.

History

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It was established in 1948 as the Primary Producers Cooperative Society based initially in the South Island of New Zealand as a meat marketing cooperative, predominantly of sheep. It became known as PPCS Limited but remained a minor player in the meat industry until the early 1970s when a new management team was appointed. The removal of subsidies to farmers, the New Zealand Meat Board ceding its monopoly on sheepmeat marketing, and meat processing industry over-capacity gave the cooperative opportunities to utilise its profitability built up over the previous decade. So in the 1980s it expanded from only minor processing operations by taking over meat processing cooperatives and companies in initially the South Island and later the North Island. In 1986 released asset value was returned to the farmer shareholders by the creation of a holding company Apex Limited. Apex was a vehicle that allowed the acquisition of Canterbury Frozen Meat.[2] Major consolidation of the New Zealand meat industry continued through the 1990s with PPCS actively involved but not getting caught out like competitors such as AFFCO Holdings.[2] However, in 2006 it was forced to take over Hawkes Bay based Richmond Meats to resolve issues resulting from a secret investment that had commenced in the late 1990s. This saddled the cooperative with debt. It was renamed Silver Fern Farms in 2008 based upon one of its long standing brands. A takeover by PGG Wrightson fell through due to the 2008 financial crisis. In June 2008, PGG Wrightson had made an unconditional offer to buy half of Silver Fern Farms for NZ$220 million, but in September was unable to complete the equity raising required to finance the offer and defaulted.[3] It had to pay $42 million in compensation to Silver Fern and wrote off a total of $50 million for the compensation and due diligence costs.[4] By 2013 the cooperative had accumulated significant losses leading to a company restructuring.[5] The company then became profitable, reporting a net profit after tax of NZD $15.4 million for 2017 and $70.7 million for 2019.[6]

Re-organisation

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On 1 October 2014, Silver Fern Farms Limited reorganised the business into three species-based units, creating two new 100% subsidiaries, Silver Fern Farms Beef Ltd and Silver Fern Farms Venison Ltd.[7]

External investment

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On Friday 16 October 2015, Silver Fern Farms accepted a 50/50 partnership proposal for an investment of NZD $261M with a subsidiary of Bright Food Group, Shanghai Maling Aquarius.[8] The full transaction which was subject to New Zealand and Chinese regulatory approvals completed in late 2016. The company is now owned in equal partnership with Shanghai Maling Aquarius Co Ltd (a subsidiary of Bright Food) and Silver Fern Farms Co-op Ltd.

Key brands

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  • Silver Fern
  • Silver Fern Farms Premier Selection
  • Grass-fed Premier Selection Reserve (beef)

Processing plants

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The company has 14 sites and processes beef, lamb and venison.

References

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  1. ^ "Silver Fern Farms Limited (149713) -- Companies Office". Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Meat Wars". Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Craig Norgate steps down as chairman of PGG Wrightson". 23 July 2009.
  4. ^ Hembry, Owen (8 May 2010). "The rise and fall, and rise and fall of Norgate". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  5. ^ "The restructuring of Silver Fern Farms". 10 November 2014. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  6. ^ "Silver Fern Farms Annual Report 2019" (PDF). Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Silver Fern Farms Annual Report 2014" (PDF). Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  8. ^ "Proposed investment by Shanghai Maling Aquarius Co., Ltd (Shanghai Maling)" (PDF). Retrieved 5 December 2015.
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