Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Butter Prices Rally

GENERAL OVERVIEW:

Trade activity in the butter market seemed to be the highlight of the session Wednesday as prices quickly bounced off nearly 4-month lows. Milk futures were limited to single-digit price shifts, with very limited market direction developing in any contract months.

MILK:

Milk futures remained mixed Wednesday in very limited trade activity in all nearby and deferred contracts. The limited volume across the entire complex seems to be focused on current milk production levels, which are ample for current and expected short-term demand. But the onset of more summerlike weather in several production areas is causing some speculation that milk production will see seasonal pressure due to heat stress if this trend continues. June contracts are the most active contracts, falling 8 cents per cwt, moving to $16.52 per cwt. July through December contracts were able to etch higher, although limited gains and trade volume were seen in all contracts. The focus on strong domestic and export demand continues to help solidify price levels in the current market range, although it may take a significant shift in order to draw additional long-term support into the market through the summer months.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:

3 Month: $16.70
6 Month: $17.30
9 Month: $17.55
12 Month: $17.56

CHEESE:

Cash cheese prices were mixed on the daily CME exchange Wednesday. Block cheese prices posted a total of 8 loads selling during the exchange market, while prices continued to etch higher, moving to $1.4975 a pound, following a 0.5 cent-per-pound gain. Barrel cheese prices on the other hand backed away from previous market support, falling 3 cents per pound in limited trade activity. A total of 2 loads of barrel cheese sold on the exchange. In the most recent USDA cheese highlights report, Northeast milk production is strong, with cheesemakers running full schedules on contracted milk. Class III spot milk and condensed skim are scarce. May sales are improving, retail demand is lighter, bulk cheese demand is firm, and export interest exceeds supply. Central milk output is steady and above last year. Cheesemakers are running full schedules. Spot Class III milk is $6 under to $1 over Class. Holiday production levels are factoring into price variance for spot milk. Domestic demand is stronger and exports remain steady. Western milk production is meeting expectations, but is tight in some areas. Spot milk demand is moderate. Cheese production ranges steady to lighter ahead of the holiday and spot inventories remain tight. Domestic demand is steady while export demand is steady to strong.

BUTTER:

Cash butter prices quickly bounced higher Wednesday morning on the exchange. Following setting nearly 4 month market lows earlier in the week when traders returned from the long holiday weekend, buyer support has regained momentum during the last week of May. Butter supplies still remain readily available, and milk supplies moving to butter churns are far from short through the spring. But buyers seem to be aggressively willing to purchase at lower prices following the market decline. Cash butter prices surged 6 cents per pound in the last day, with another 14 loads exchanging hands during the session. This accounts for a weekly total of 50 loads, with two more trading days yet this week and month.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

July corn closed down 5.00 cents per bushel at $4.5250, July soybeans closed down .75 cent at $11.8525 and July soybean meal closed up $2.00 per ton at $330.60. July Chicago wheat closed down 13.00 cents at $6.2250. August live cattle closed up $3.35 at $242.50. July crude oil is down $4.42 per barrel at $89.47. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 182 points at 50,644 and NASDAQ is up 18 points at 26,674.




Wednesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cash Butter Prices Lead Complex Higher

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 3 1/4 Lower
SOYBEANS: 3 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $3.60 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $3.55 Higher
DOW JONES: 226 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 3 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $4.41 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Class III milk futures are mixed in a narrow to moderate trading range Wednesday morning with soon-to-expire spot month May contracts gaining 1 cent per cwt at $16.91 per cwt. June contracts continue to be the most actively traded market in the complex, but wide morning swings in outside markets seem to have moved trader interest from fundamental market moves, focusing on potential technical pressure following the Memorial Day holiday. June futures are trading at $16.49 per cwt, currently 11 cents per cwt lower. The rest of the complex remains mixed in a very narrow range from 5 cents lower to 4 cents per cwt higher, with prices through late summer and early fall starting to gain momentum based on potential strong dairy demand and milk supply tightness due to seasonal trends. Cash cheese prices remain mixed in moderate trade activity with block prices increasing 0.5 cent per pound, moving to $1.4975 per pound with eight loads of block cheese selling on the exchange. Barrel cheese trade remained sluggush with just two loads traded, as prices fell 3 cents per pound, to $1.44 per pound. Butter prices were the bright spot of the entire dairy complex, moving 6 cents per pound higher, to $1.62 per pound. Continued active trade in the butter exchange posted 14 loads of butter selling Wednesday, pushing the holiday-shortened week total to 50 loads already this week. Traders will closely monitor all cash market movement through the rest of the week, in order to get a better handle on post-holiday buyer demand.





Wednesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Price Strength May Be Difficult to Maintain

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: 2 to 10 Higher
Class IV Milk Futures: 2 to 5 Lower
Butter Futures: Steady to 1 Higher

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 1 to 2 Lower
Soybean Futures: 1 to 2 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: Steady to $1 Higher
Wheat Futures: 7 to 9 Lower

MILK:

There seems to be little change in the market as farms continue to push milk production and increase cow numbers. It is more than just holding onto cows to produce another calf, but the increase in longevity of the cow due to improved genetics is building the herd. Milk production per cow remains strong, indicating there are not a lot of low-producing cows in the dairy herd. The capacity to process more milk has been added and is being added with the expectation of increased milk supply. Farmers are embracing the ability to increase milk production. The only thing to slow milk output in the near term will be the weather. However, that will be minimized due to advances in keeping cows comfortable.

CHEESE:

Increased cheese production has moved the block cheese price to the lowest level since Feb. 17. More milk is being made available to the vat. This allows for increased cheese production, with plants wanting to move it to the spot market rather than build inventory.

BUTTER:

The increase in the butter price was welcomed over the past two days, but it may be short-lived or have limited upside potential. The fact that April inventory was 9.0 percent below a year ago is not impacting the desire of plants to move supplies to keep plant inventories from building.




Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Butter Prices Rally

GENERAL OVERVIEW: Trade activity in the butter market seemed to be the highlight of the session Wednesday as prices quickly bounced o...