1 / 49

Working with Dairy Businesses in Challenging Times

Working with Dairy Businesses in Challenging Times. Kimberly, WI September 11, 2009 Kevin Bernhardt UW-Platteville/Extension. John and Mary Dairy Case Study. Participant Case Study Comments: What is the son thinking! What is the daughter-in-law’s education

louise
Télécharger la présentation

Working with Dairy Businesses in Challenging Times

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Working with Dairy Businesses in Challenging Times Kimberly, WI September 11, 2009 Kevin Bernhardt UW-Platteville/Extension

  2. John and Mary Dairy Case Study

  3. Participant Case Study Comments: • What is the son thinking! • What is the daughter-in-law’s education • Operation performance, yield, production • Why does the profitability look the way it does? • Family living expense / lifestyle • Condition of facilities • How much does the son want • Relationship with suppliers • Capital assets • Why is milk production dropping

  4. Context

  5. Annual Class III Prices

  6. Annual Class III

  7. Monthly Class III Prices 14 18 23 19-24

  8. Per cwt costs, prices, & income after charge for Labor/Mgt CFFM: 101-200 cow dairies, Free stall, no organic or pasture

  9. CDP: 100-250 Cow Dairies in WI (freestall, no pasture, not organic, cost basis of assets) 5 of last 6 years ROE>ROA

  10. CFFM Data (cost)

  11. Net Farm Income From Operations (cost)CFFM: 101-200 cow dairies, free stall, no organic, no rotational grazingCDP: 100-250 cows, all else the same

  12. WE ARE NOT ALL THE SAME and NOBODY IS THE AVERAGE!

  13. ROROE (cost basis w tax depreciation)CDP: 100-250 Cow Dairies in WI (freestall, no pasture, no organic)

  14. ROROE (mrkt basis w economic depreciation)CDP: 100-250 Cow Dairies in WI (freestall, no pasture, not organic, cost basis of assets)

  15. 2008 ROROE & ROROA (cost w tax depr.)CDP: 100-250 Cow Dairies in WI (freestall, no pasture, not organic, cost basis of assets)

  16. 2006 ROROE & ROROA (cost w tax depr.)CDP: 100-250 Cow Dairies in WI (freestall, no pasture, not organic, cost basis of assets)

  17. Net Farm Income (Mrkt w. Econ Depr)CDP (same farms): 100-250 cows, freestalls, no organic, no pasture

  18. Net Farm Income From Operations (cost w. Tax Depr)CDP (same farms): 100-250 cows, freestalls, no organic, no pasture

  19. 2006 (CDP, 100-250 cows)Mrkt Value of Assets and Economic Depreciation

  20. 2007 (CDP, 100-250 cows)Mrkt Value of Assets and Economic Depreciation

  21. 2008 (CDP, 100-250 cows)Mrkt Value of Assets and Economic Depreciation

  22. 2008 (CDP, 100-250 cows)Mrkt Value of Assets and Economic Depreciation

  23. Our Economic World Today • Interdependent • As trading nations • VOLATILITY • Dairy Industry structure • Energy • Technology • Interdependent • As businesses

  24. I’m Procrastinating • What’s your mission • Profits for bank • Satisfied and profitable customer • Reasonable risk-return • Farm Customer Choices • Path back to profitability (SR & LR) • Underlying structure (finance) - Dupont • Mgt capacity (adaptability, business sense) • Personal condition (age, family help, equity, off-farm income) • Financially “happy” exit (Phil)

  25. Path back to profitability may take some bridge building • Short Run • Debt restructuring • Increase working capital • Innovative payment arrangements • Long Run • Financial Analysis • Partial Budgeting • Operational/Strategic alignments • Strategic and Business Planning

  26. Is there current cash flow? (through harvest, through Spring planting) NO YES Generate Cash Flow NO Liquidation Situation Is there sustainable profitability?

  27. They Cash Flow, Now is there sustainable profitability? • Financial & Management Diagnostics • Efficiency -Efficiency • Scale -Turnings • Debt structure -Leverage • 5 C’s -Character Liquidation Situation YES NO NO GO Accept & Finance Plan? Re-Engineer Operation YES

  28. Is there current cash flow? (through harvest, through Spring planting) • Are cash receipts expected to cover cash costs? • Is there some contribution to overhead? • Is current ratio 1.5 and working capital at least enough to cover family living and debt payments • WC:GR > 20-25% • Is Ending cash flow:All cash expenses >10% • If Yes: Move onto next question (profitability) • Cut cash costs where possible • Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.

  29. NO: Generate Cash Flow • Cut cash costs where possible • Don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater • Outsource low return activities and sell assets • Interest only payments • Restructure and lengthen amortization • New or increased operating lines • Sale of non productive capital assets • Sale of inventory (sale and re-own) • Elimination/Sale of non profitable enterprises

  30. NO: Generate Cash Flow • Investment partner • Delay new capital asset purchases • Lower family living • Off-farm employment

  31. Is There Sustainable Profitability? • Is ROROE at a sufficient level to meet business and family objectives? • Is ROROE competitive with other opportunities? • Is ROROA > interest rate • And thus ROROE > ROROA • Is the value of unpaid labor and management covered? • Is depreciation covered? • Is a payment to equity capital covered

  32. Financial & Management Diagnostics • Multiple years (trends) • Cost and market basis • Accrual • Benchmark • Search for Where should management time and creativity be targeted? And

  33. Introducing the DuPont System for Financial Analysis DuPont

  34. DuPont System • “DuPont Financial Analysis Model is a rather straightforward method for assessing the factors that influence a firm’s financial performance.” (Gunderson, Detre, and Boehlje, AgriMarketing 2005)

  35. DuPont System – What is It? • The system identifies profitability as being impacted by three different levers: • Earnings & efficiency in earnings • Ability of your assets to be turned into profits • Financial leverage Earnings Turnings Leverage

  36. DuPont System Earnings Operating Profit Margin Return On Assets (less interest adj.) IncomeStream = X Asset Turnover Return On Equity = X Turnings Financial Structure InvestmentStream Leverage

  37. OK Total Revenue = cash income +(-) inventory changes Basic Costs = cash expenses +(-) accrual exp changes + purch lstk Depr Non Basic Costs = labor + depreciation + interest expenses Too Low NFIFO – unpaid labor/mgt + interestTotal Revenue OPMR Earnings Return On Assets Too Low = X Total RevenueTotal Assets Turnings OK ATO Return On Equity = X Too Low Total AssetsTotal Equity OK Leverage

  38. OK NFIFO – unpaid labor/mgt + interestTotal Revenue OPMR Earnings Return On Assets Too Low = X Total RevenueTotal Assets Turnings Too Low ATO - Unproductive machinery? - Buildings not being used? - Breeding livestock not producing? - Unproductive land? Return On Equity = X Too Low Total AssetsTotal Equity OK Leverage

  39. Is There Sustainable Profitability? NO: • Strategic Planning • Partial Budgeting • Plan the work - work the plan • Strategic alignments • Efficiency, Scale, Structure • Labor utilization Re-Engineer Operation YES GO

  40. Accept & Finance Plan? NO YES Re-Engineer Operation Liquidation Situation

  41. What Else? • Reduce Risk • Loan Guarantee Programs • Marketing • Production • Fixed interest rates (secondary market) • Insurance checkup • Labor • Health • Sensitivity Analysis

  42. 5 C’s • Collateral • yes, but! • Conditions • What is the loan for? • Capacity • Capital • Character • Not a computational task!

  43. Be Creative • Is it better to stick to your rules and policies, or find a way to get some money back? • Good managers in bad situations could be good future & profitable customers • How can you minimize losses

  44. Banker on Management Team?

  45. Finally There is a reason they put a human behind the lenders desk and it’s not for when times are good

More Related