Dear Friend,
New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters announced today that
Fonterra has some serious questions it must answer.
They propose to sell New Zealand’s flagship brands to the French
company Lactalis, including brands like Anchor and Mainland, for
almost $4 billion.

Farmers and the public need answers:
- Is Fonterra’s “long-term agreement” for three, four, or ten years?
Whatever the number, the clock will stop and New Zealand’s milk will
become just another in a long line of milk jugs. What stops Lactalis
from diluting “New Zealand” products with vegetable fat and
lower-quality milk?
- Is it true that CEO Miles Hurrell and Fonterra executives stand to
earn huge bonuses from this deal, and if so how much? Is it also true
that they plan to leave the company after this deal is done? If so,
what is their long-term interest in Fonterra’s success?
We need to get real. Quality always sells. The Anchor brand has
growth ahead of it; why else would the largest dairy company in the
world offer almost $4 billion to own Anchor?
Dairy companies that own their consumer brands have direct
relationships with the customer.
Anchor is a flagship brand, with a legacy built by generations
since 1886 and more than 130 years of marketing New Zealand milk to
the world, developing the products, building customer and consumer
trust. For $4 billion, we are giving it away.
No successful milk futures market exists globally - so why does
Fonterra think it will succeed where others have failed? Other dairy
giants, like the company they seek to sell to, thrive because of their
consumer brands.
Friend, every dollar earned must reflect
New Zealand’s value add: turning milk into quality products creates
jobs, income, and a future in New Zealand.
Fonterra say that affording to grow these brands is beyond them. A
Fonterra executive told us it would cost “billions,” but this is
rubbish. Their new UHT plant in Edendale is in the tens of millions.
They already have partnerships in New Zealand to process high-end milk
in Hawke’s Bay and package milk powder in Christchurch. There are
investors and companies lining up to help Fonterra grow in New
Zealand.
No more spoilt milk. We must grow New Zealand’s fortunes,
and farmers need to think very carefully about this deal.
The primary sector is the engine room
of our economy and New Zealand First is a true nationalist
party.
We must protect the interests of
New Zealand. Join
us, or
support our work, as we continue to champion common sense
and pragmatism.
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