MILK:
Trading volume in milk futures was light with only the January and February contracts showing a few hundred contracts trading in each with only contracts showing substantially less volume. Class III futures were steady to lower through the August contract with minor gains in fourth quarter contracts. Class IV futures showed activity only in the July contract. It is a holiday week with reduced trading hours. The market will be open until 12:05 Central time on Tuesday and closed on Wednesday for Christmas. Trading activity is likely to be even lighter on Tuesday. Lighter trade could cause increased volatility if underlying cash prices showed significant movement up or down. The buyers of cheese and butter have not reacted much to lower milk production in November. They are purchasing based on needs for the first quarter of 2025 and do not see the need to be aggressive.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
3 Month: | $19.33 |
6 Month: | $19.33 |
9 Month: | $19.20 |
12 Month: | $19.07 |
CHEESE:
USDA released the November Cold Storage report which showed a decrease in inventory in all categories. American cheese inventory declined 7.9 million pounds totaling 766.6 million pounds. This is 8% below November 2023. Swiss cheese inventory declined by 489,000 pounds from October totaling 23.7 million pounds. This is 13% higher than a year ago. Other cheese inventory declined 5.7%, totaling 544.4 million pounds. This is 7% below a year ago. Total cheese inventory totaled 1.335 billion pounds, down 13.0 million pounds from October and 7% below a year ago.
BUTTER:
Butter inventory declined by 54.2 million pounds in November with supply ending at 213.5 million pounds. This is a large one-month decline and the largest November decline since 2021. Inventory is slightly higher than a year ago, putting butter in a not-as-bearish position as it had been for some time. Butter inventory has not been increasing as some reports had suggested indicating exceptional demand moving to the holidays. Increased butter production has been readily absorbed, which should support the market.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
March corn closed up 1.50 cents per bushel at $4.4775, January soybeans closed down 5.00 cents at $9.6950 and March soybean meal closed down $4.20 per ton at $298.00. March Chicago wheat closed up 7.50 cents at $5.4050. February live cattle closed down $0.95 at $187.45. February crude oil is up $0.15 per barrel at $69.61. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 67 points at 42,907 with the NASDAQ up 192 points at 19,765.