GENERAL OVERVIEW:
Both Class III and Class IV futures were generally lower. No price movement or limited price movement in the underlying cash was viewed as negative by traders.
MILK:
When the market is bullish, steady cash prices are viewed as friendly. When the market is bearish, steady prices are viewed as negative. That is the attitude of today. This does not necessarily mean the market will trend lower from here, but it limits the upside potential. Milk output is higher than a year ago, with sufficient supply available for bottling and manufacturing needs. March fluid milk sales were 2.3 percent higher than in March 2025. Whole milk sales increased 4.8 percent; flavored whole milk increased 13.4 percent; reduced-fat milk decreased 0.7 percent; low-fat milk declined 4.6 percent; fat-free skim milk declined 3.4 percent; flavored fat-reduced milk declined 0.5 percent; buttermilk increased 2.9 percent; with other fluid milk product sales up 13.7 percent. Organic whole milk sales increased 10.3 percent; organic flavored whole milk jumped 31.5 percent; organic reduced-fat milk increased 1.1 percent; organic low-fat milk decreased 8.4 percent; organic fat-free milk sales decreased 2.3 percent; organic flavored fat-reduced milk increased 14.6 percent, with organic sales of other fluid milk products declining 100.0 percent.
AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES:
| 3 Month: | $17.11 |
| 6 Month: | $17.79 |
| 9 Month: | $17.96 |
| 12 Month: | $17.91 |
CHEESE:
The negative aspect of the cheese market was that blocks closed spot trading with 10 uncovered offers remaining at the close. This could suggest the price will have limited upside potential. Manufacturers are interested in moving supplies to the market quickly to minimize building inventory.
BUTTER:
The spot butter price closed steady after initially declining during spot trading. Trading was brisk, with 26 loads changing hands. However, there were 15 unfilled bids remaining at the close of spot trading. This suggests the market may have a floor where buyers are interested in buying, but not necessarily that the price will trend higher. It will depend on how aggressive those buyers will want to be.
OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:
July corn closed up 21.25 cents per bushel at $4.7700, July soybeans closed up 36.00 cents at $12.1300, and July soybean meal closed up $.20 per ton at $334.50. July Chicago wheat closed up 28.75 cents at $6.6450. June live cattle closed down $0.53 at $253.38. June crude oil is up $3.24 per barrel at $108.66. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 160 points at 49,686, with the NASDAQ down 134 points at 26,091.


