GENERAL OVERVIEW:
Class III and Class IV futures diverged for a second consecutive day, with Class III contracts higher and Class IV lower. The March Federal Order class prices were significantly higher than in February.
MILK:
Class III milk futures posted double-digit gains in numerous contracts today in response to the increase in the block cheese price. The October contract established a new high and nearly reached $19.00. Class IV contracts moved in the opposite direction due to further weakness in butter and nonfat dry milk. Milk production is seasonally strong, with most reporting they are experiencing a spring flush. The March Federal Order class price was released today, showing significant increases from February. The Class II price is $17.34, an increase of $2.00 from February. The Class III price is $16.16, up $1.22 from February. The Class IV price is $18.94, up $2.65 from February. USDA will release the February Dairy Products report on Thursday. The report provided the volume of dairy products produced for the month. It is expected to show increased production from February 2025.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
| 3 Month: | $17.93 |
| 6 Month: | $18.42 |
| 9 Month: | $18.49 |
| 12 Month: | $18.27 |
CHEESE:
Spot milk availability is increasing, with some cheese plants reporting that they are receiving additional offers for milk. Some plants are unable to utilize extra milk supplies as milk receipts from patrons are increasing. Some milk is being diverted due to facility maintenance. This has resulted in spot milk being priced from $2.00 to as much as $7.00 below class. Domestic cheese demand is reported as steady.
BUTTER:
Many butter churns are operating seven days a week but are not running at full capacity. Ice cream production is increasing, resulting in a little less volume of cream being available for churning. The supply of cream is not tight, but it is not as abundant as it has been. Butter supplies are sufficient for demand, with manufacturers moving any extra product as quickly as possible rather than building plant inventory.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
May corn closed down 3.50 cents per bushel at $4.5425, May soybeans closed down 2.50 cents at $11.6850, and May soybean meal closed up $1.80 per ton at $318.20. May Chicago wheat closed down 18.75 cents at $5.9750. June live cattle closed up $1.08 at $244.35. May crude oil is down $2.06 per barrel at $99.32. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 224 points at 46,566, with the NASDAQ up 250 points at 21,841.


