MILK
It was another rough day for Class III futures. The weakness of cheese prices put further pressure on futures with contracts posting double-digit losses across the board other than the front-month November contract. It is concerning to see this weakness at this time of year. It increases the concern for milk prices once demand is met through the end of the year. The weather has improved cow comfort but so far has not spurred greater milk production. The Global Dairy Trade auction took place on Tuesday and showed an increase of 4.8% for the trade-weighted average from the previous event. This is the largest increase since the event on August 20.
There were 36,595 metric tons sold at an average price of $3,997 per metric ton. Anhydrous milk fat increased 4.6% to $7,558 per metric ton or $3.43 per pound. Butter jumped 8.3% to $6,990 per metric ton or $3.17 per pound. Buttermilk powder increased 2.1% to $3,238 per metric ton or $1.47 per pound. Cheddar cheese gained 4.0% to 4,973 per metric ton or $2.36 per pound. Lactose fell 6.1% to $843 per metric ton or $0.38 per pound. Skim milk powder increased 4.0% to $2,850 per metric ton or $1.29 per pound. Whole milk powder gained 4.4% to $3,713 per metric ton or $1.68 per pound. Mozzarella increased by 0.9% $4,607 per metric ton or $2.09 per pound.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES
3 Month: | $19.41 |
6 Month: | $19.28 |
9 Month: | $19.18 |
12 Month: | $19.16 |
CHEESE
Cheese demand is reported to be all over the board. Some plants report tight supplies while others indicate demand is seasonally slow. Much of this is variety-specific and depends on the location. Cheese production is active with some looking for more milk and paying as much as $1.25 over class.
BUTTER
The butter price seems comfortable at the current level and may remain that way for the rest of the year. There is no butter shortage due to strong churning activity and higher inventory levels than a year ago. Some end users are making contracts for the first quarter of 2025 to take advantage of the lower price. Butter futures trading has been active throughout much of 2025 as processors and end users are positioning themselves for the long term.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY
December corn closed up 7.75 cents per bushel at $4.2625, January soybeans closed up 2.00 cents at $10.0375 and December soybean meal closed down $1.10 per ton at $298.40. December Chicago wheat closed up 0.75 cent at $5.7325. December live cattle closed up $0.63 at $185.40. December crude oil is down $0.10 per barrel at $71.89. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 1,508 points at 43,730 with the NASDAQ up 544 points at 18,983.