Fonterra gets NZ milk boost as dry bites

New Zealand dairies boosted Fonterra's August milk production while shares in drought-affected chemical producer Nufarm tumbled eight per cent.
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Australian agribusiness might be struggling under the weight of drought but over the ditch a spell of good weather has given milk production a boost.
Dairy producer Fonterra has seen its New Zealand operations increase milk supply by five per cent in August, putting it down to ideal weather conditions.
The dairy giant had reported a four per cent dip in its Australian milk production in July, on account of higher farm input costs and bone-dry conditions across large swathes of the nation’s east and south.
Some areas have recorded less than a fifth of their typical rainfall in the last three months.
Dairy exports from both nations rose in July, up six per cent in NZ and four per cent in Australia, Fonterra said in a statement Monday.
But international milk prices fell 1.3 per cent in September as volumes on the global dairy trade increased.
The next auction on the GDT will take place October 2.
Drought was also a contributing factor in the plummeting share price of chemical and fertiliser company Nufarm, which posted its lowest price in more than three years on Monday as it resumed trading after a $238 million capital raising.
Shareholders took up about 90 per cent of their entitlements, the company said, at the offer price of $5.85 per share in an institutional entitlement offer.
Its institutional shortfall bookbuild clear price was $6.35 per new security, a 50 cent premium to the $5.85 offer price.
Nufarm expects to raise another $65 million in a retail entitlement offer on Thursday.
Last week the company announced a $15.6 million full-year loss on the back of drought-related impairments, and the cost of acquiring crop protection products from Europe.
Shares in Nufarm fell 57 cents, or 8.6 per cent, to $6.02 at 1244 AEST.

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Así lo expresó Domingo Possetto, secretario de la seccional Rafaela, quien además, afirmó que a los productores «habitualmente los ignoran los gobiernos». Además, reconoció la labor de los empresarios de las firmas locales y aseguró que están «esperanzados» con la negociación entre SanCor y Adecoagro.

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