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UPDATE: Beingmate slides further in Shenzhen tumble

The decline in the shares only amounts to a $16.6 million loss.

Suze Metherell
Fri, 03 Jul 2015

UPDATEDBeingmate Baby & Child Food Co shares have more than halved in value on the Shenzhen stock exchange over the past three weeks, pushing their price 21% below what Fonterra Cooperative Group [NZX: FCG] paid for its 18.8 percent stake in the Chinese infant formula maker.

Beingmate shares fell 9.6% to 14.30 yuan, below the 18 yuan apiece, that the Auckland-based dairy cooperative paid for 192.4 million shares in March. The shares have more than halved from a record 30.95 yuan on the Shenzhen exchange in mid-June as the tech-heavy Chinese stock exchange abruptly pulled back after surging 100% since the start of the year.

The decline in the shares only amounts to a $16.6 million loss in New Zealand dollar terms compared to the $755 million ascribed to the holding when it was first bought, because the Kiwi has dropped 10% against the yuan in that time.

Fonterra and Beingmate announced their global partnership last August to help meet China's growing demand for infant formula and increase export volumes of Fonterra's Anmum infant formula brand. At the time, the world's largest dairy exporter had been hoping for a 20% stake in the company, and flagged it would cost around $615 million.

Last month, Fonterra sold its third dim sum bond, raising one billion yuan, or $230 million, with the proceeds helping fund the stake in Beingmate.

The partnership will create a fully integrated global supply chain from the farm gate direct to China's consumers, using Fonterra's milk pools and manufacturing sites in New Zealand, Australia, and Europe. The Chinese government last year imposed stricter regulations on products such as infant formula amid concerns over food safety.

In February, Beingmate reported a 90% drop in operating profit in its preliminary results for the 2014 financial year to 65.7 million yuan, compared to 721 million yuan the previous year. Revenue was also down by 17%.

Units in Fonterra Shareholders' Fund, which give holders access to the cooperative's dividend stream, were unchanged at $4.88. The units touched a record low of $4.58 in mid-June after Fonterra posted a 16 percent drop in first-half profit to $183 million in the six months to January 31, which it said reflected tough conditions in dairy, while also trimming its guidance for dividends to a range of between 20c and 30c, from a previous range of 25-35c.

(BusinessDesk)

Suze Metherell
Fri, 03 Jul 2015
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UPDATE: Beingmate slides further in Shenzhen tumble
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