Canadian Manufacturing

Australian regulator could sour $1.3B Saputo dairy deal

by Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
Human Resources Manufacturing Operations Regulation Food & Beverage


The country's competition watchdog says the significant acquisition could lead to lower milk prices for farmers and is looking to Canadian dairy for reassurances

MONTREAL—Australia’s competition regulator is raising concerns that Saputo Inc.’s proposed purchase of dairy processor Murray Goulburn Co-Operative Co. could lower competition and dairy prices paid to farmers.

The agency says its concerns focus solely on Murray Goulburn’s largest dairy plant in the western Victoria region, where Saputo would control more than two-thirds of the dairy processing capacity from its existing facility and the addition of the Koroit plant.

The only major competitor is Fonterra, which could join Saputo in lowering prices, leaving farmers with no options, it said in a news release on March 1.

The regulator says dairy farmers want the $1.3-billion friendly purchase deal to proceed after years of uncertainty about the future of Murray Goulburn.

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However, it believes dairy farmers in the region will be worse off and face lower raw milk prices in the longer term. The regulator says it believes another buyer would step forward if Saputo’s acquisition of the facility doesn’t proceed.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has given the interested parties two weeks to provide reassurances before making a final decision on March 29.

Saputo couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

Analyst Irene Nattel of RBC Capital Markets says Saputo’s price commitments to some current Murray Goulburn suppliers for five years don’t appear to sufficiently address the regulator’s long-term pricing concerns.

She expects the Montreal-based dairy processor will “vigorously address” the concerns and may extend price commitment to all suppliers in the region for a longer period of time.

It would also likely argue that another buyer wouldn’t necessarily offer better long-term pricing, she wrote in a report.

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