Class III futures were mixed, with pressure on
nearby contracts due to further weakness of block cheese. Class IV
futures were mostly higher on the increase in butter and nonfat dry
milk. January fluid milk sales declined 2.3% from January 2025.
Most milk futures contracts showed further
gains on Thursday. The confidence of those who have been bullish due to
the cold storage report is being tested, as the block cheese price has
declined since the report. If there is another day of weakness,
liquidation could be triggered. Fluid milk sales in January were 2.3%
lower than a year earlier. Whole milk sales increased 1.6%; flavored
whole milk jumped 17.8%; reduced fat declined 5.2%; low-fat milk fell
10.3%; flavored fat-reduced milk declined 6.2%; buttermilk sales
declined 2.5%; and other fluid milk products increased 2.2%. Organic
whole milk sales declined 2.4%; organic flavored whole milk jumped
16.1%; organic reduced-fat milk declined 3.1%; organic low-fat milk
sales fell 24.9%; organic fat-free milk declined 15.7%; organic flavored
fat-reduced milk sales fell 28.3%; and other organic milk products fell
65.4% from January 2025.
| 3 Month: |
$17.22 |
| 6 Month: |
$17.95 |
| 9 Month: |
$18.22 |
| 12 Month: |
$18.11 |
The spot cheese prices have not responded as
many had anticipated after the February Cold Storage report showed a
decline in American cheese stocks from January, with inventory 3.0%
below February 2025. The weakness of block cheese over the past two days
has had little impact on Class III futures. Buyers have not been
aggressive, resulting in sellers lowering their offers.
The spot butter price has responded to another
month of inventory remaining 17% below the previous year. Sellers have
been offering loads to the spot market, but buyers have purchased those
loads, resulting in minor gains. The spot price pushed higher early
during spot trading as buyers wanted to take advantage of the lower
price. However, gains were trimmed due to sellers willing to take
advantage of the aggressive buying and offering loads aggressively. So
far this week, there have been 103 loads of butter traded.
May corn closed down 0.25 cent per bushel at
$4.6700, May soybeans closed up 2 cents at $11.7375, and May soybean
meal closed up $2.30 per ton at $322.10. May Chicago wheat closed up
7.25 cents at $6.0500. June live cattle closed up $0.95 at $234.80. May
crude oil is up $3.34 per barrel at $93.66. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average is down 469 points at 45,960, with the NASDAQ down 522 points at
21,408.