Milk futures closed under pressure, with the
Class IV contract showing greater losses than Class III. The
agricultural prices used in calculating income over feed increased in
all commodities from February.
The May and June Class III contract fell
nearly $1.00 per cwt over the past three days. During that period of
time, the cheese price only declined 1.25 cents. The heightened
volatility will remain and may increase as the year progresses.
Short-term trading with traders scalping the market for a profit, if
realized, moved the futures market outside the realm of the usual. This
type of market provides frustration as well as opportunities. The March
Agricultural Prices report was released today. The average corn price
was $4.27 per bushel, which is an increase of $0.16 from February but
down $0.30 per bushel from March 2025. The premium/supreme hay price was
$230.00 per ton, up $1.00 per ton from February and down $12.00 per ton
from a year ago. The All-milk price was $19.70 per cwt, up $1.40 from
February, but down $2.30 from March 2025. The average soybean meal price
will be released tomorrow by the FSA, which will then give us the
prices to determine the income over feed for the month.
| 3 Month: |
$17.68 |
| 6 Month: |
$18.27 |
| 9 Month: |
$18.27 |
| 12 Month: |
$18.14 |
It was a little surprising that the block
cheese price found more aggressive buying interest rather than seeing
the buyers hold for lower prices. The price may trade in a tighter range
moving through the spring flush period as increased milk receipts keep
the supply of milk sufficient for the cheese vat.
The bottomless butter market continues to
trend lower. It is not that there is a glut of butter, but a sufficient
supply. Churns are operating seven days a week, and manufacturers
continue to move supplies to the market as quickly as possible rather
than letting inventory build at the plant level.
July corn closed down 3.00 cents per bushel at
$4.7475, July soybeans closed down 1.50 cents at $11.9550 and July
soybean meal closed down $4.90 per ton at $318.90. July Chicago wheat
closed down 16.25 cents at $6.3675. June live cattle closed down $1.25
at $254.00. June crude oil is down $1.81 per barrel at $105.07. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average is up 790 points at 49,652, with the NASDAQ up
219 points at 24,892.