OPENING CALLS:
| Class III Milk Futures: | 2 to 5 Higher |
| Class IV Milk Futures: | 8 to 15 Higher |
| Butter Futures: | 1 to 2 Higher |
OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:
| Corn Futures: | Steady to 1 Lower |
| Soybean Futures: | 1 to 2 Higher |
| Soybean Meal Futures: | $3 to $5 Higher |
| Wheat Futures: | 3 to 5 Lower |
MILK:
USDA increased milk production again in the World Agricultural Supply and Demand report Thursday. They increased the estimated milk output to reach 235.3 billion pounds. This is an increase of 600 million pounds from their March estimate. If this comes to fruition, it will be an increase of 3.6 billion pounds above 2025. But even with this increase, the all-milk price was raised by $0.80 per cwt to average $20.50. This would be $0.67 per cwt below 2025. We know overall exports have been strong and are expected to remain that way, but domestic demand will need to improve to realize higher milk prices.
CHEESE:
Cheese prices may remain under pressure. The decline in the block cheese of $0.12 the past two days has changed market sentiment. The uptrend has been negated for now, and buyers have stepped back as sellers have become aggressive. This may result in further weakness and follow a similar pattern to butter.
BUTTER:
The slight increase in the butter price on Thursday does not indicate support has been found. Buyers were more aggressive as they wanted to take advantage of the lower price to increase ownership. Butter output remains strong, but slightly lower than it has been due to an increase in cream demand from other Class II products. The cream supply remains sufficient for demand.


