GENERAL OVERVIEW:
Buying interest ran its course in block cheese, with the price falling back today. Milk production remains strong, and the potential for higher milk prices may increase that strength as producers will try to capitalize on higher prices. The USDA will release the Agricultural Prices report tomorrow.
MILK:
Milk futures have increased substantially from the lows in January, improving the outlook for milk prices significantly. Class III futures came under pressure today due to weakness in the block cheese price. Even with this weakness, it is unlikely the market will drop back very much unless the recent strength was the result of emotion and what-if scenarios rather than fundamentals. Milk production is strong and continues to run ahead of last year. The percentage of gain this year may not be as dramatic as last year, as this year is being compared to the substantially higher milk production of 2024. Milk production in 2025 was 231.4 billion pounds, up 5.6 billion pounds from 2024. The USDA currently estimates milk production in 2026 to average 234.5 billion pounds, up 3.0 billion pounds from 2025. An increase of that magnitude will add substantially to the available milk supply. The USDA will release the January Agricultural Prices report on Friday, providing most of the prices used in the calculation of income over feed for the Dairy Margin Coverage program.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
| 3 Month: | $16.31 |
| 6 Month: | $17.16 |
| 9 Month: | $17.52 |
| 12 Month: | $17.55 |
CHEESE:
More milk is moving to cheese manufacturing as milk output increases seasonally. Even with increasing milk receipts, manufacturers are looking for spot milk due to increased manufacturing capacity in some areas. Milk components continue at record values, improving cheese yields.
BUTTER:
The butter price continues to find support and is in a better position with lower inventory than last year. The lower supplies may provide greater support as demand remains strong despite increased butter production.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
May corn closed up 1.50 cents per bushel at $4.4350, May soybeans closed down 1.50 cents at $11.6350, and May soybean meal closed down $.90 per ton at $320.90. May Chicago wheat closed up 4.75 cents at $5.7450. April live cattle closed down $3.38 at $236.90. April crude oil is down $0.21 per barrel at $65.21. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 17 points at 49,499, with NASDAQ is down 274 points at 22,878.



