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Rabobank says as China's consumer incomes move up, they will trade up to value-added products and be willing to pay more for food they consider to be natural, high-quality, and safe. But NZ's rivals will be there too

Rural News
Rabobank says as China's consumer incomes move up, they will trade up to value-added products and be willing to pay more for food they consider to be natural, high-quality, and safe. But NZ's rivals will be there too

Content supplied by Rabobank

The New Zealand red meat sector must focus on creating greater value from its exports into China, as the rate of import growth slows in this major export market, according to new research from Rabobank.

In its recently-released report, China’s Animal Protein Outlook to 2020, the specialist global agribusiness bank says while Chinese imports of sheepmeat and beef will continue to grow out to at least 2020, the rate of growth will not be as rapid as it has been in the past.

In addition, says Rabobank animal proteins analyst Blake Holgate, as China has continued to open its market to New Zealand’s competitors in recent years, the NZ red meat sector no longer enjoys the same unique competitive advantage it had when it was the first developed country to enter into a free trade agreement with China in 2008.

These factors mean New Zealand’s red meat sector must work to differentiate its offering in the Chinese market to capture greater value for its product, while also continuing to pursue export volume growth, he says.

“New Zealand now has an opportunity to take advantage of changing consumer and distribution trends in China and redefine its competitive advantage,” Mr Holgate says.

“Promoting the attributes that the Chinese associate with New Zealand food – including high-quality, safe and produced in a natural ‘clean and green’ environment – will increasingly provide opportunities for increasing export returns. This will be both through growing value and increasing volume.”

Mr Holgate says while the rate of import growth for sheepmeat and beef in China will slow, it is still expected to be significant in absolute terms, with a forecast 800,000 tonne growth in beef and 50,000 tonne growth in sheepmeat import demand for China out to 2020.

“And this is encouraging for New Zealand, given that China is the country’s largest export market for sheepmeat and second largest for beef,” he says.

Competition

But while the size of China’s sheepmeat and beef important market is still growing, so too is New Zealand’s competition in the market.

“Brazil and Australia are the dominant exporters of beef into China, with 30 per cent and 19 per cent market share, respectively, in 2016. Despite Australia being the only other major exporter of sheepmeat into China, New Zealand must also compete with China’s domestic sheepmeat production, which is capable of increasing production to largely meet domestic demand should high import prices incentivise it to do so,” Mr Holgate says.

“This increased competition means market access alone may well no longer be enough to deliver the consistent growth in export returns that the New Zealand sheepmeat and beef industries seek from China.”

Unlocking value

However, he says, targeting Chinese consumers using tailored products will be the key to unlocking further value.

“As consumers move up the income classes, they tend to trade up to value-added products and are willing to pay more for food they consider to be natural, high-quality, and safe,” Mr Holgate says.

“Leveraging the qualities that distinguish New Zealand exports from those of its competitors will increasingly create opportunities to extract more value from sheepmeat and beef that New Zealand exports to China.”

That said, the pursuit of a value strategy should not be done at the expense of growth.

“In a market where per capita consumption is still low and price sensitivity remains, it is important that value growth does not come at the expense of volume,” Mr Holgate says.

Accessing new distribution channels, particularly e-commerce and the food service industry, should be another area of focus for the New Zealand meat industry in order to maximise export returns.

“E-commerce is the fastest growing retail channel in China, with online sales growth forecast to increase by 20 per cent out to 2020, compared to just six per cent for traditional retail,” Mr Holgate says.

“Accessing these new distribution channels is important if New Zealand wants to reach China’s medium and high income consumers. Recent investment by Chinese companies in New Zealand’s industry should provide increased access to these distribution channels, and create the opportunity for New Zealand sheepmeat and beef industries to gain an important advantage over competitors if it can establish sustainable supply chains into China.”

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9 Comments

Predictability of consumer staples due for a drastic rethink

Investors should be wary of sector going ex-growth as it struggles to adapt to change

https://www.ft.com/content/cbd8fbe8-0e20-11e7-b030-768954394623

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High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our T&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights.
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So what lies behind this chain of events? From an industry perspective, the issues are deep-seated and hard to solve. 

Firstly, the value chain is undergoing huge transformation, in which the total profit pool structurally shrinks. The margin compression is massive among distributors and retail chains whose main competitive advantages, proximity and price, gradually decline. 

Price transparency and proximity are key and, consequently, conflicts between makers and distributors abound. Just ask Colgate: its toothbrushes were recently excluded from French-based Carrefour stores and its pet food brand Hill’s was excluded from the large pet retailers in the US after Hill’s products started to be sold on Walmart.com. This pressure on margins is going from bad to worse.

The second issue concerns eating and consumer habits, which are rapidly changing. This could be a positive for the sector as new tastes could lead to innovation, thus pricing power. The problem is that most of the large players have missed the new trends. 

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High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our T&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights.
https://www.ft.com/content/1f661af9-7fd8-3af2-92f7-15da1c1dd71f

One of Europe’s biggest dairy companies, FrieslandCampina, is facing a paper loss of up to €46m from its holdings in China Huishan Dairy, the financially stressed company whose shares on Hong Kong’s exchanged suddenly plummeted 90 percent last week.

The Dutch company formed a joint-venture with Huishan in 2015 as part of a deal for greater access to China’s vast baby formula market, which saw it buy $30m worth of shares in its Chinese partner. FrieslandCampina also paid $700m for half of Huishan Dairy’s Xiushui plant in the city of Shenyang, write Tom Hancock, Sherry Ju and Jennifer Hughes.

https://www.ft.com/content/1f661af9-7fd8-3af2-92f7-15da1c1dd71f

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FT - Paywalled

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Just search for it, you can normally get in via google.

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