GENERAL OVERVIEW:
Milk futures closed steady to higher, except for the nearby January contract. There was no reason for Class III futures to close higher. The strength was the result of short covering ahead of the weekend.
MILK:
Some thought has developed that the release of the new dietary guidelines might provide support for dairy prices. That is not very likely due to the current market fundamentals. It will take more than moving the recommendation for dairy to the top of the food pyramid to tighten the supply. It may improve consumption but not provide support to the market due to the supply being more than demand. The market will need a change in numerous areas before there will be a noticeable change in supply and demand. The strength in Class III futures earlier today was the result of short covering due to the weakness of the previous two days. That has been the pattern. A few days of weakness will result in short covering. A few days of strength will result in long liquidation as traders take advantage of the volatility to scalp the market for a small profit. This has been the pattern for a while and may continue to be the pattern for a while longer.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
| 3 Month: | $15.11 |
| 6 Month: | $15.71 |
| 9 Month: | $16.30 |
| 12 Month: | $16.60 |
CHEESE:
For the week, blocks fell 7.50 cents with 33 loads traded. The weekly average price is $1.3420. Barrels remained unchanged with no loads traded. The weekly average price is $1.40. Dry whey declined 2.50 cents with two loads traded. The weekly average price is 70.80. The block price increased on Wednesday but declined for the rest of the week as manufacturers wanted to move supply to the market rather than hold it in inventory.
BUTTER:
For the week, butter fell 7.50 cents with 62 loads traded. The weekly average price is $1.3250. Grade A nonfat dry milk jumped 9.00 cents with 18 loads traded. The nonfat dry milk price jumped 9 cents over the past five trading days. This moves the price to the highest level since August 19, 2025.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
March corn closed down .25 cent per bushel at $4.4575, March soybeans closed up 1.25 cents at $10.6250, and March soybean meal closed up $.10 per ton at $303.70. March Chicago wheat closed down .75 cent at $5.1725. February live cattle closed down $1.55 at $233.73. February crude oil is up 1.36 per barrel at $59.12. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 238 points at 49,504, with the NASDAQ up 191 points at 23,671.


