Redemption risk. Two very dangerous words if you believe the rhetoric from Fonterra. But what is redemption risk and what function does it play in co-operatives?
Redemption comes from the co-operative principle of voluntary and open membership. This principle has been set in place to ensure that individuals and businesses wishing to transact with a co-operative are able to do so if they are prepared to put in the required investment. But equally, if we choose to stop interacting with a co-operative, we are able to have our investment returned under the rules in that co-op’s constitution.
Redemption is the favoured method worldwide for managing member capital. In an investor-owned firm, shares only benefit their owners either through dividend payments or by increases in the share price. Co-operatives, on the other hand, primarily support their members through guaranteed access and maximised return for products. This means that redemption from a co-operative is not driven solely by lack of profit, but rather by dissatisfaction with the co-op.
Essentially, when members ask for their investment to be refunded they are not just withdrawing capital, they are withdrawing support and product. This is why redemption is so important to a co-operative. When members start redeeming their membership, they are sending a very strong message to the Board that their decisions are no longer meeting their needs as members. A strong co-operatively minded board should look on the risk of redemption as the flame under them to keep them agile and member focused. Redemption is the ultimate form of control for members.
This is all well and good in theory, but does the principle stack up in reality? In 2008, Fonterra suffered a major redemption crisis, and this is one of the most persistent arguments for the “Trading Amongst Farmers” proposal.
At the end of that season, Fonterra members were capitalising on the significant change in share price by cashing in any excess shares caused by the nationwide drought or by going to a capital-free competitor for one or more seasons. Like most New Zealand businesses, Fonterra was struggling to access debt to fund this due to the GFC. This put enormous strain on the balance sheet and would have been unbelievably stressful. On the face of it, much of this situation appears to be the result of circumstance, but look a little deeper any you will see that the Board had set themselves up for this fall.
Over the previous eight years, Fonterra had taken no retentions, choosing instead to pay everything out to members. This meant that a sudden need for capital had to be met entirely by debt during the GFC. At the time, the Board was also incentivising management to grow “Total Shareholder Returns,” of which the share price was a major component. On top of this, Fonterra was not discussing the non-financial benefits of belonging to a co-operative with members, which could be argued was because, less than 12 months earlier, the Board had proposed a partial listing. So when investor-owned competitors came knocking, the promise of accessing tied-up capital was all that was needed to win some farmers over.
Things have now improved due to more co-operatively focused governance. Fonterra has begun taking retentions and this has strengthened the financial position. The share price is now far more stable. Changes to the constitution allow farmers to hold shares well above their production, milk-price penalties for production above the season-opening shareholding have been introduced, and capacity adjustment all work to discourage gaming of shares. And most importantly Fonterra is beginning to talk the co-operative talk to its members. All these changes have been driven by Redemption Risk.
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