Friday 10th February 2012 |
Text too small? |
NZX, the stock exchange operator, has been given the nod that Fonterra Cooperative Group wants it to run its private shareholder market.
The Fonterra Shareholders’ Market will let farmer-owners trade shares among themselves as part of the Trading Among Farmers (TAF) regime scheduled to kick off in November. NZX will operate the market independent of its other bourses, and will provide trading, clearing, settlement, surveillance, regulatory and other reporting services.
NZX will operate the market under a flat fee structure, and is ironing out the finer commercial details, it said.
The TAF regime will see farmers hold so-called ‘wet’ shares equivalent to the volume of milk solids they produce each year, and ‘dry’ shares equalling up to 100 percent of their ‘wet’ shareholding. Both types of shares will be open to trading, and a fund will be set up which could hold a farmer’s shares on their behalf, paying out cash to farmers or helping purchase shares if need be.
The fund would also be open to public investment, something that has raised the ire of some Fonterra shareholders.
NZX shares were unchanged at $2.70.
(BusinessDesk)
BusinessDesk.co.nz
July 3rd Morning Report
ikeGPS Chief Financial Officer Transition
TWL - TradeWindow announces strategic partnership with FTA
BLT - Patent issue settled and new 5 year agreement with BSP
July 2nd Morning Report
July 1st Morning Report
June 27th Morning Report
SDL - FY2026 Earnings Guidance
PaySauce Director resigns for US-based role with NZTE
General Capital Releases 2025 Annual Report