This note is an addendum to the blog
STT's forest valuation charade following the release of STT’s Annual Report for
2022/23 on 31st October 2023.
STT has admitted making errors with its financial statement since 2010. It has restated prior year financials and provided an extensive note.
STT’s net equity essentially
comprises the value of its forest estate. There aren’t many other assets or
liabilities. How forests are valued is therefore very significant. The 2022/23
Annual Report acknowledged the error of its past ways and changed the valuation
methodology.
Although STT’s forest estate is now worth
more with the 2022 forest value restated by approximately $24 million, the change in
accounting methods confirms STT’s pragmatic approach to accounts preparation.
Since 2010 STT has valued the forest
estate as one cash generating unit before splitting the value between the three
components: land, roads and trees. From 2016 onward a fourth was added, a make
good asset being the cost of replanting/regenerating felled forests.
The latest Annual Report shows STT
valuing the forest estate in the same way, by discounting future expected net
harvest proceeds, but then allocating all the value to trees.
How then are the other three
components treated?
Land
Between 2010 and 2022 STT gave forest
land a zero value. Most of STT’s forest estate is on Crown land but there is
some in STT’s name, which now appears in STT’s financials at historical cost, $
11 million at 30th June 2023. Land previously written off has made a
return to the balance sheet. This has meant retained earnings are also
increased. The bulk of forest land which STT manages is Crown land which is
given a zero value, ostensibly because STT doesn’t own it. That didn’t prevent Crown
land having a value in STT’s books before 2010.
Roads
STT has now reverted to its pre 2016
practice of valuing roads as a separate item of property, plant and equipment,
on an historical cost basis, but with a much higher rate of depreciation. The
written down value of roads at 30th June 2023 was $13 million. This
also increased STT’s retained earnings and hence its net equity.
Make good asset
This has been removed from the financials. By not allocating a portion of the forest estate to the make good asset has meant the value of trees increases. But there hasn’t been a corresponding increase in retained earnings/ equity because prior years’ earnings have been adjusted. by immediately expensing the make good amounts in those years, rather than capitalising them. This has meant retained earnings have been adjusted downwards. Tree values increased on one hand, increasing retained earnings, which were then offset by a similar amount representing the immediate expensing of make good amounts. The balance of yet to be spent amounts is still recorded as a liability, as a reestablishment provision. The peculiar concept of treating unspent regeneration expenses as an asset has thankfully been banished from STT’s books. It is now being expensed when incurred as one would expect a mandated expense be treated. No different to a leave provision, say.
Effects of the accounting changes
Attributing a value for land and
roads as described, rather than allocating a portion of the forest estate has
meant the value of trees is $24 million higher than it was previously. STT’s
retained earnings and hence its equity position is accordingly $24 million
higher.
Expensing the costs of regeneration
is a meaningful change. The next logical step is to include these costs (and
the costs of roads) when valuing future net market proceeds and hence the value
of STT forest estate, which accounts for almost all STT’s equity at any point
in time.
How can it be that a cost of
maintaining a perpetual asset isn’t included in the calculation of net harvest
proceeds needed to value a forest?? If done so there is little doubt the timber
value of forest would be negative.
A glimmer of hope for a revised
balance sheet for STT was the inclusion for the first time of $299k worth of
ACCUs as an asset, additional income earned during the 2022/23 year.
But who owns the underlying land that
makes STT able to earn ACCUs from the Clean Energy Regulator for undertaking
greenhouse gas abatement measures? Is it STT’s land or Crown land which STT
considers has nil value.
STT used to justify the non-inclusion
of notional rents for forested land when calculating future net harvest
proceeds by saying it wasn’t necessary because land would be allocated a portion
of the forest estate once valued. But then it allocated a nil value to that
land, not only to land it owned but to Crown land growing STT’s forests.
Reality has intervened and STT now
records a value for the land it owns. What then for all the other land? Does it
not have a value? How much longer is STT going to persist with the notion that
as far as possible land will be recorded as having no value so that when
harvesting occurs any non-timber losses attributable to the land and its
associated values can be ignored.
Thanks for your ongoing efforts John.
ReplyDeleteSo why isn't STT forced to do its accounting like a private forest grower?
Why does the forest industry insist on operating on a playing field that is anything but level?
Surely STT's dodgy accounting practices ultimately undermines the entire forest industry.
Never mind that STT does not operate as a commercial entity.
I would love to see a comparison between how a private forest grower does their accounting vs a public forest grower.
Cheers!
Any chance you can do an analysis of the metro accounts?
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