GENERAL OVERVIEW:
Class III futures were mixed with contracts through mid-year lower. Futures held up well despite the weakness in underlying cash. The USDA increased expected milk production for this year, with milk and dairy product prices mixed.
MILK:
The movement of spot cheese prices was bearish, but Class III futures did not see the pressure one would have expected, given the weakness of cash. Some of it had been factored in, and some might have been the reluctance of traders to press the market lower due to the already substantial price decline. However, there seems to be little to change the market direction anytime soon. USDA released the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report. It raised the estimate for milk production for this year to 232.3 billion pounds, up 200 million pounds from the December estimate. This would be 2.9 billion pounds higher than in 2025, and another record milk output. USDA decreased the estimate for Class III 2025 production to $18.02 per cwt, down $0.09 from December. It lowered the milk estimate for this year to $16.35, down $0.70. The Class IV average price for 2025 was lowered by $0.02 to $17.38, while the average price for this year was raised by $0.05 to $14.45. The All-milk price estimate for 2025 was raised by $0.15 to $21.25, while the average price was reduced by $0.50 for this year to $18.25. The average November soybean meal price was finally released, completing what was needed for the calculation of the income over feed for the Dairy Margin Coverage program. The income over feed price for November was $10.04.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
| 3 Month: | $15.05 |
| 6 Month: | $15.68 |
| 9 Month: | $16.29 |
| 12 Month: | $16.61 |
CHEESE:
USDA reduced its 2025 estimate for the cheese price slightly to $1.7878 per pound. The average price this year was reduced $0.09 per pound to $1.5850. The dry whey price increased slightly to 59.56 per pound for 2025 and by 3.50 cents per pound for this year to 67.00 cents.
BUTTER:
The average butter price for 2025 was reduced slightly to $2.2202 per pound and was lowered by 6.50 cents next year to $1.61 per pound. What a difference a year makes! Increased milk production with record butterfat resulted in plentiful cream supplies.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
March corn closed down 24.25 cents per bushel at $4.2150, March soybeans closed down 13.50 cents at $10.4900, and March soybean meal closed down $5.40 per ton at $298.30. March Chicago wheat closed down 6.00 cents at $5.1125. February live cattle closed up $1.53 at $235.25. February crude oil is up $0.67 per barrel at $59.79. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 86 points at 49,590, with the NASDAQ up 63 points at 23,734.


