Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - August Class III Price Announced At $20.10

MILK

Milk futures showed some significant pressure for the third consecutive day. This has eliminated a lot of the gains of last week. Underlying cash just does not provide consistent support to develop a higher price trend for cheese, dry whey and nonfat dry milk with price increases short-lived. USDA released the Federal Order class price for the month of August. Class II price increased $0.25 to $26.91. Class III price declined $2.42 reaching a level of $20.10. Class III price declined $0.98 to $24.81. That compares to a Class II price for August 2021 of $16.51, a Class III price of $15.95 and a Class IV price of $15.92. Quite a nice improvement, but high cost of production eliminates the benefits of higher prices. USDA released the July Agricultural Prices report today showing some surprising changes from the previous month and the previous year. The average corn price was $7.25, down $0.12 from June but up $1.23 per bushel from a year ago. the All-milk price was $25.70, down $1.20 from June but $5.60 higher than a year ago. The big change was for premium/supreme hay at $333.00 per ton or July, up $56.00 per ton from June and up $93.00 from a year ago. FSA has not yet posted the average soybean price, so we do not yet know the income over feed for the month. I will report that tomorrow.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.06
6 Month: $20.37
9 Month: $20.37
12 Month: $20.37

CHEESE

Cheese prices are likely to continue to chop around. However, blocks may again touch to recent lows and possibly fall below that level before the weekend. Buyers remain unaggressive in the spot market as there is sufficient cheese available to the market with buyers able to purchase much of what they need in the country. This allows them to prepare for holiday demand without having to be aggressive on the spot market.

BUTTER

Price may remain in a sideways range between $3.00 and $3.10. Lower butter inventory keeps buyers coming to the daily spot market to pick up supply that they are unable to obtain through regular sellers in the country. Inventory is increasing but remains far below the level of a year ago.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn declined 6 cents ending at $6.7375. September soybeans declined 5.50 cents closing at $15.0750 with September soybean meal down $3.50 per ton closing at $458.90. September wheat gained 10.75 cents ending at $8.09. October live cattle declined $1.25 closing at $142.57. October crude oil fell $2.09 closing at $89.55 per barrel. The DOW declined 280 points closing at 31,510 while the NASDAQ declined 67 points ending at 11,816.




Wednesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Selling Pressure Continues

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 9 Lower
SOYBEANS: 6 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $5.40 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.95 Lower
DOW JONES: 138 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 32 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $1.00 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 2.50 cents, closing at $1.7250 with no loads traded. Price may retest the low and possibly fall below that due to no buyer interest. Barrel cheese price remained steady at $1.85 with no loads traded. Dry whey price declined 0.50 cent, ending at 47.50 cents with no loads traded. This did not provide support for Class III futures with prices 30 cents lower to one cent higher with only gain is seen in the May 2023 contract. Butter price increased 0.50 cent, closing at $3.0550 with eight loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price declined 1.50 cents, closing at $1.55 with no loads traded. Class IV futures are mixed with October and January futures 35 cents and 11 cents lower, respectively, while May through July futures are 2 cents higher. Butter futures are 0.80 to 2.50 cents lower. Dry whey futures are 0.40 to 1.02 cents lower.




Wednesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Market Uncertainty Leaves Overnight Activity Nonexistent

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Steady to 5 Lower
Class IV Milk Futures: 5 to 10 Lower
Butter Futures: 1 to 2 Lower

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 8 to 10 Lower
Soybean Futures: 8 to 10 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: $2 to $4 Lower
Wheat Futures: 6 to 8 Lower

MILK:

Milk futures took a beating Tuesday as underlying cash continues to move steady to lower for cheese and remains choppy for butter. Milk production is variable across the country but should be nearing its low point. Milk production last month showed a strong gain in production per cow, which resulted in overall milk production slightly higher than a year ago. The level at which milk production will rebound this fall will determine production growth in comparison to last year. Cow numbers are not expected to increase very much with production per cow fueling the gains. The ongoing impact of the high cost of production will determine overall milk output. USDA will release the August Federal Order prices Wednesday. The July Agricultural Prices report will also be released, providing the average prices used in the calculation of income over feed for the Dairy Margin Coverage program.

CHEESE:

Diverging cheese prices Tuesday was just the result of buyers and sellers taking care of business. Traders will view the bounce of blocks as temporary unless proven otherwise.

BUTTER:

Price may slip further again Wednesday due to buyers not being interested during spot trading Tuesday. Buyers may wait for a further price decline before stepping back in. However, downside risk is limited with price not anticipated to fall below $3.00.




Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Tuesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Lose More Ground

MILK

Milk futures took a beating again today with Class IV contracts falling more than Class III. Class IV prices are in a much better position than Class III due to a much higher butter price having greater support than cheese prices. Milk production is sufficient for manufacturing and bottling needs. Plants are not running full but are as full as their workforce allows. It has been an ongoing struggle to maintain a full production staff at many plants. This has had a greater impact on butter production than cheese production for some reason. Or it may be the fact that the attractive prices for cream this summer resulted in plants selling a portion of their cream rather than churn it. There have been more producers that have been struggling with the high cost of production and are questioning whether they should remain in business. Farms going out of the dairy business is not something that we like to see, but it is another difficult time that will be worked through. There have been many other times in the past and yet cow numbers remain steady and production per cow continues to improve. The August Federal Order class prices will be released tomorrow with the trade anticipating a Class III price of $20.12 and a Class IV price of $24.86. USDA will also release the July Agricultural Prices report providing average prices used in calculating the income over feed price.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.30
6 Month: $20.60
9 Month: $20.54
12 Month: $20.50

CHEESE

Prices will move as business is accomplished. The weakness of price is not a matter of slow demand but one of plentiful supply. Buyers of cheese are able to purchase sufficient supply for current needs out in the country leaving little reason to come to the daily spot market to purchase. This leaves sellers with more cheese than they would like after meeting demand in the country. The cheese is offered on the daily spot market and sellers have sometimes had difficulty finding buyers even at lower prices. This is why the market remains under pressure and may not change anytime soon.

BUTTER

The decline of butter price today is not a change in the market. Buyers did not show up to do any business and sellers wanted to move product. Even a lower price did not generate buying interest. Price may move down to test the $3.00 level again. Demand has slowed but remains good.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn declined 4 cents closing at 46.7975. September soybeans fell 21.75 cents ending at $15.13 with September soybean meal down $16.00 per ton closing at $462.40. September wheat fell 21.75 cents closing at $7.982. August live cattle gained $0.95 ending at $142.50. October crude oil fell $5.37 ending at $91.64 per barrel. The DOW fell 308 points closing at 31,791 while the NASDAQ declined 135 points ending at 11,883.




Tuesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Butter Settles Back

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 8 Lower
SOYBEANS: 24 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: $25.50 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $1.95 Higher
DOW JONES: 425 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 215 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $5.25 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price gained 3.50 cents closing at $1.75 with one load traded. Bids moved prices higher a load was traded at the closing price. Barrel cheese prices declined a penny to $1.85 with eight loads traded. the market was on a roller coaster with price initially increasing a penny before selling pressure took price down to $1.8475 and then back up to the close. The fact that blocks moved higher, and barrels came back from the low with a good volume of trading activity during the period, provided sufficient concern for traders to cover some of their sold positions. Dry whey price slipped 0.50 cents closing at 48 cents with one load traded. Butter price declined 3.25 cents closing at $3.05 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price declined 0.50 cent ending at $1.5650 with two loads traded. Class III futures are generally lower but did rebound from the lows set before and during spot trading. Futures range from 33 cents lower to 5 cents higher. December shows the only increase. Class IV futures have only traded in the January contract and that is 50 cents lower. Butter futures are unchanged to 5 cents lower. Dry whey futures are steady to 0.40 cent higher. Today is the final day to trade August dairy futures and options with the Federal Order prices being announced tomorrow.




Tuesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Cheese Remains Weak

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Mixed
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 8 to 10 Lower
Soybean Futures: 16 to 20 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: $5 to $6 Lower
Wheat Futures: 7 to 10 Lower

MILK:

The inability of underlying cash cheese prices to hold or increase Monday triggered aggressive selling. This moved September Class III futures below $20.00. Sufficient milk is available to satisfy the demands of schools across the country as well as the needs of manufacturing. The slight increase of milk production in July may indicate further gains might be possible as weather cools and cow comfort improves. Milk production is expected to increase next year as farmers try to improve production per cow rather than expand the herd size. Replacements are tight and construction costs are high. The desire may also change to raise more replacements internally rather than purchasing them. Cows may also not be culled as heavily as they had been.

CHEESE:

Cheese has been unable to find solid support. Buyers do not need to come to the daily spot market to purchase supply due to sufficient supply available in the country through regular channels. Block cheese is testing price levels last seen in November 2021 and has been in a steep downtrend since May. Prices may not find support as long as there remains more supply than demand.

BUTTER:

Butter is the bright spot and continues to move higher, keeping Class IV prices substantially higher than Class III. Buyers have been aggressive on reduced supply of butter and strong international demand. Nonfat dry milk has found some support over the past three weeks, gaining 11 cents adding to the strength of Class IV.




Monday, August 29, 2022

Monday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Succumb to Selling Pressure

MILK

Class III milk futures are having a difficult time moving higher. Traders are torn between the potential for a seasonal increase of buying interest and the fact that sufficient cheese availability allows buyers to remain less aggressive. Milk futures have been trying to move against the trend of underlying cash. However, continued pressure from underlying cash may indicate there is limited upside potential. Tomorrow is the final trading day for August futures and options with the Federal Order prices announced on Wednesday. Traders anticipate an August Class III price of $20.13 and a Class IV price of $24.81. This is quite a large spread between the two. Class IV price is expected to remain above Class price for quite some time. It is expected to remain that way for a while as butter price is so much higher over cheese. The current fundamentals suggest it will remain that way. Milk production across the country remains variable, but still at low levels for the year.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.14
6 Month: $20.68
9 Month: $20.73
12 Month: $20.68

CHEESE

Block cheese moved down to the lowest level it has been since November 17, 2021. Moving to this level at a time when prices generally would strengthen is not a good sign. Buyers of cheese are finding sufficient supply in the country through other channels eliminating the need for them to come to the daily spot market to find cheese. Supply is plentiful in the country which leaves sellers coming to the spot market to try to move some product. This results in sellers offering it lower to entice limited buying interest. It is not that demand is not there but that there is more supply than demand.

BUTTER

Supply is not quite as abundant as cheese with inventory 21% below a year ago. Buyers have been increasing ownership to be in position to have sufficient supply available for Fall and holiday demand. If the current pace continues, inventory may end the year significantly below a year ago. which would keep price strong for quite some time.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn gained 15 cents closing at $6.8375. September soybeans fell 70.50 cents ending at $15.3475 with September soybean meal up $0.30 closing at $478.40 per ton. September wheat jumped 35.25 cents closing at $8.20. August live cattle gained $0.75 closing at $141.55. October crude oil jumped $3.95 settling at $97.01 per barrel. The DOW declined 184 points while the NASDAQ declined 124 points.




Monday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Prices Trend Lower

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 13 Higher
SOYBEANS: 29 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: Unchanged
LIVE CATTLE: $1.67 Higher
DOW JONES: 7 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 38 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $3.70 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 2.50 cents closing at $1.1750 with no loads traded. Price broke to the lowest level since November 17, 2022. Barrel cheese price declined 2.25 cents ending at $1.86 with no loads traded. There were only sellers showing up during spot trading with no buyers to be found. Butter price remained unchanged at $3.0825 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price increased a penny to $1.57 with 5 loads traded. Dry whey price increased 1.50 cents with no loads traded and price closing at 48.50 cents. Class III futures are unchanged to 49 cents lower. November is posting the largest loss. Class IV futures are 46 cents lower to 15 cents higher. Butter futures are steady to 3.50 cents lower. Dry whey futures are steady to 2 cents higher.



 

Global supplies of dairy remain tight

The Global Dairy Trade auction racked up another decline in its weighted average Tuesday, fifth session in a row, down 2.9%, following the 5% drop Aug. 2.


 Declines were led by anhydrous milkfat, down 9.8%, after falling 1.4% Aug. 2. Butter inched up 0.2%, after a 6.1% plunge, and whole milk powder was down 3.5%, following a 6.1% drop. Skim milk powder inched up 0.1%, after falling 5.3% last time, and GDT Cheddar was up 4.2%, following a 0.7% slip Aug. 2.


StoneX Dairy Group says the GDT 80% butterfat butter price equates to $2.3027 per pound U.S., up fractionally after losing 14.8 cents in the last event, and compares to CME butter which closed Friday at a pricy $2.94. GDT Cheddar, at $2.2703, was up 9.4 cents, and compares to CME block Cheddar at a bargain $1.82. GDT skim milk powder averaged $1.5984 per pound, virtually unchanged, and whole milk powder averaged $1.55 per pound, down 5.8 cents. CME Grade A nonfat dry milk closed Friday at $1.52 per pound.


North Asian market share, which includes China, picked up from the last event slightly, according to StoneX, but continued below year-ago levels and has been below a year ago since July 2021. Southeast Asia, Middle East and Europe picked up purchases, bringing their share higher than a year ago and the last event.  


Meanwhile, exports are moving out of Ukraine in a brokered deal with Russia, Turkey and the United Nations. But, Foodmarket News reports that Ukraine’s grain exports are down 46% year on the year, at 2.65 million tons so far.


The USDA’s World Markets and Trade report stated since the end of 2021, global milk supplies have tightened, propelling prices for manufactured dairy commodities higher. Among the major dairy exporters through May, only Argentina saw milk output grow year-over-year, up 1%, while Australia was down 6%, European Union down 1%, New Zealand down 6% and U.S. down 1%.


Global supplies will likely remain tight as hot, dry conditions in the EU increase cow discomfort and weigh on output per cow, according to the report. Diminishing producer profitability in Argentina will likely cause production growth to moderate. Tightening supplies in the EU and Argentina are expected to more than offset improving production in New Zealand, where pasture conditions have improved considerably since the start of 2022 and the short-term outlook is positive, according to the USDA.


Favorable conditions in Australia and strong prices are expected to improve production from the current year-to-date; however, producer caution is expected to keep expansion at a minimum short term and keep annual output below 2021.


Back home, the report said relatively stable cow inventories and slowly recovering milk per cow are expected to cause U.S. milk output to turn positive in the second half of the year. The 2022 and 2023 milk production forecasts were raised in the latest World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates.


 The 2022 cheese price average was lowered to $2.0750 per pound, down 11 cents from the July estimate, and compares to $1.6755 in 2021. The 2023 average is estimated at $1.9750, down 9.50 cents from last month’s projection.


Butter is expected to average $2.7850 in 2022, up a half-cent from last month’s estimate, and compares to $1.7325 in 2021. The 2023 average was projected at $2.3750, down 6.50 cents from a month ago.


Nonfat dry milk will average $1.6650, according to the WASDE, down 9 cents from a month ago, and compares to $1.2693 in 2021. The 2023 average was projected at $1.45 per pound, 19.50 cents lower than projected last month.


Dry whey is expected to average 61 cents per pound in 2022, down 3 cents from a month ago, and compares to 57.44 cents in 2021. The 2023 average is expected to slip to 48.50 cents per pound, 3 cents lower than a month ago.


The Aug. 18 Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook mirrored milk price and production projections in the Aug. 12 WASDE. The Outlook also stated lower expected prices for dairy products should boost their demand; thus, domestic use for dairy products was adjusted higher for 2022 and 2023.


The Outlook added that there were fewer milk replacement heifers as of July 1 compared to July 1, 2021. The NASS Cattle report says replacement heifers numbered 3.75 million July 1, 50,000 head lower than July 1, 2021.


Checking feed, the WASDE reported that the U.S. corn outlook is for lower supplies, reduced feed and residual use; slightly higher food, seed and industrial use; smaller exports; and lower ending stocks. Projected beginning stocks were 20 million bushels higher, based on a lower use forecast, where a reduction in corn used for ethanol is partially offset by greater use for glucose and dextrose.


Corn production for 2022-23 was forecast at 14.4 billion bushels, down 146 million from the July projection, and 5% below 2021. The season’s first survey-based corn yield forecast, at 175.4 bushels per acre, is 1.6 bushels below last month’s projection and a year ago. Area harvested was forecast at 81.8 million acres, down less than 1% from the June forecast, and down 4% from a year ago.


Total corn use was reduced 45 million bushels to 14.5 billion. Feed and residual use was lowered 25 million based on a smaller crop. Corn exports were cut 25 million bushels to 2.4 billion. Ending stocks were lowered 82 million bushels to 1.4 billion. The season-average corn price was unchanged at $6.65 per bushel.


 Beginning soybean stocks, production, exports and ending stocks were higher. Production was forecast at a record 4.53 billion bushels, up 26 million, or 2%, from a year ago, with higher yields more than offsetting lower harvested area, now forecast at 87.2 million acres, down 300 million from July but 1% more than a year ago. The soybean yield forecast was a record 51.9 bushels per acre, up 0.4 bushels from last month. Soybean supplies were projected at 4.8 billion bushels, up 36 million from last month. Exports were raised 20 million bushels to 2.16 billion. Ending stocks were forecast at 245 million bushels, up 15 million.


The season-average soybean price was forecast at $14.35 per bushel, down 5 cents from last month. Soybean meal and oil price forecasts were unchanged at $390 per short ton and 69 cents per pound, respectively.


Meanwhile, the latest Crop Progress report shows corn silking at 94%, as of the week ending Aug. 14, 4% behind a year ago and 3% behind the five-year average. 62% was at the dough stage, 9% behind a year ago and 3% behind the five-year average. 57% was rated good to excellent, 5% behind a year ago.


Soybean blooming was at 93%, 1% behind a year ago and dead even with the five-year average. 74% are setting pods, up 13% from the previous week, 6% behind a year ago and 3% behind the five-year average. 58% of the crop was rated good to excellent, 1% ahead of a year ago.


Mid-August CME dairy prices were mixed as traders anticipated the July Milk Production and Cold Storage reports Aug. 22. The Cheddar blocks climbed to $1.89 per pound Monday, highest since July 27, but closed Friday at $1.82, 2.50 cents lower on the week but 12.75 cents above a year ago.


The barrels jumped 6 cents Monday, hitting $1.9475, also the highest since July 27, but finished at $1.8950, up 0.75 cents, 41.75 cents above a year ago and 7.50 cents above the blocks. Sales totaled three cars of block and eight of barrel.


Midwest cheesemakers tell Dairy Market News sales have improved as market prices continue to fluctuate, although the $2 plus may be a bit of a barrier for buyers. Spot milk remains available despite summer induced decreases. Plant downtime, both scheduled and due to unexpected line outages, have kept neighboring plants with more milk than expected at this point in the season.


 Milk is also available for western cheese makers though labor shortages and delayed deliveries of production supplies are regulating output. Export demand is steady to higher as prices are favorable to international buyers. Domestic cheese demand saw a small uptick this week though retail and food service demand is below previously forecasted levels. Higher prices are causing shoppers to reduce purchases while food service and restauranteurs continue to reduce hours and menu offerings due to labor shortages, higher input costs and reduced customer traffic, says DMN.


Butter made it to $2.99 per pound Wednesday but closed the week at $2.94, a half-cent higher and $1.2775 above a year ago, with 48 loads exchanging hands.


Butter plants have increased micro-fixing as cream supplies have tightened. Spot cream has moved out of the range for profitable returns, says DMN, as butter hovers around $3 per pound. Some suggest spot cream availability may not improve until Labor Day, if then.
Demand for cream is strong in the West, and cream availability continues to tighten as high seasonal temperatures take a toll on milk output. Ice cream makers continue to purchase cream, though some of this demand is expected to melt away in the coming weeks. Butter makers are running busy schedules though some plants were having difficulty finding available tankers, thus delaying loads of cream and contributing to unplanned down time. Labor Day and back to school sales are contributing to a small uptick in retail and food service sales. Concern about availability in coming months are helping maintain butter prices.


Grade A nonfat dry milk climbed to $1.5350 Wednesday, highest since Aug. 4, but closed Friday at $1.52 per pound, up a quarter cent on the week and 27 cents above a year ago, buoyed by stronger than expected GDT prices. There were 13 sales were reported for the week.


Dry whey saw its Friday finish at 45 cents per pound, up a half-cent on the week but 8 cents below a year ago, with two sales for the week at the CME.


The Aug. 15 Daily Dairy Report points out that in just six months, CME spot dry whey prices tumbled from an all-time high of 84.25 cents per pound to a nearly two-year low, warning that every penny drop in the whey price shaves 6 cents off Class III values. Based on today’s spot market whey price of 44.50 cents, Class III milk is worth roughly $2.50 per cwt less than it would have been had whey prices held their February peak.


 A big part of the reason for the lower prices is China. The DDR says hog growers operated in the red for most of the first half of 2022 and cut back on expensive feeds including whey. That and a major infant formula maker in the U.S. curtailed orders for dairy ingredients, including whey powder, after one of its five plants was shut down from February to early June, according to the DDR.


The September Federal Order Class I base milk price was announced at $23.62 cwt, down $1.51 from August but $7.03 above September 2021. It’s the lowest Class I since March and equates to $2.03 per gallon, down from $2.16 in August and compares to $1.43 a year ago. The nine-month Class I average stands at $23.84, up from $16.41 a year ago, $16.65 in 2020 and $16.51 in 2019.


Farm finances are getting tough, especially in the West, according to the Aug. 12 Dairy and Food Market Analyst. The Analyst estimates current break-evens in California are just shy of $23.50 cwt and $22.50 in Idaho. Nearby Class III futures are several dollars below those levels, the Analyst warned.


Dairy margins strengthened the first half of August as increasing milk prices more than offset a similar rise in projected feed costs, according to the latest Margin Watch from Chicago-based Commodity and Ingredient Hedging LLC.


Strong domestic and export demand continues to support cheese production at the expense of churning and drying milk for butter and powder, the MW stated. June U.S. dairy exports set records for both volume and value, with $886 million shipped out, besting the previous record in May after adjusting for the shorter month. While milk powder exports declined, cheese, butter and whey all topped year-ago levels by sizeable margins with cheese exports setting a record high and whey exports posting the second highest level ever, according to the MW.


Not helping matters, fluid milk sales continue to falter. The USDA’s latest data shows sales of U.S. packaged fluid products totaled 3.3 billion pounds in June, down 1.7% from June 2021. Conventional product sales totaled 3.1 billion pounds, down 1.8% from a year ago. Organic products, at 234 million pounds, were off 0.5% and represented 7% of total sales for the month.


Whole milk sales totaled 1.2 billion pounds, up 2.3% from a year ago, up 1.2% year to date and represented 33.8% of total sales in the six months.


Skim milk sales, at 177 million pounds, were down 9.5% from 2021 and down 7.7% YTD.
Total packaged fluid sales for the first half of 2022 amounted to 21.6 billion pounds, down 2.3% from 2021. Conventional product sales totaled 20.2 billion pounds, down 2.3%. Organic products, at 1.4 billion, were down 2.3%, and represented 6.7% of total milk sales for the period.


In the week ending Aug. 6, 57,400 dairy cows were sent to slaughter, up 1,400 head from the previous week but 2,200 head, or 3.7%, below a year ago.


Cooperatives Working Together members accepted four offers of export assistance this week to capture sales of 1.6 million pounds of American-type cheese and 37,000 pounds of cream cheese. The product is going to customers in Asia, Middle East-North Africa and Oceania, and delivered through February.




Monday Morning Livestock Market Update - Milk Futures Should Maintain Support

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Mixed
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 5 to 7 Higher
Soybean Futures: 12 to 16 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: Mixed
Wheat Futures: 5 to 8 Lower

MILK:

It will be an interesting week for milk futures as the strength in Class III last week surfaced due to anticipation and not reality. Underlying cash cheese prices did not support the rally in futures. Class IV was a different story as both butter and nonfat dry milk prices increased. There is a sense of seasonal prices strength which may result in cheese prices trending higher. Milk futures through the end of next year are again above $20.00 with November, December, and January above $21.00. Milk production is holding well despite higher input costs, the impact of hot weather, and higher fuel costs. Some areas will have less than optimal feed supplies with lower feed quality while others have put up excellent forage this summer with a good corn crop to be harvested. Milk production is expected to increase next year.

CHEESE:

It is uncertain whether cheese prices have found a bottom. The weakness of blocks on Friday may keep buyers less aggressive. Buyers are picking up supply through regular channels in the country leaving little reason to come to the daily spot market aggressively. Inventory continues to increase eliminating any concern over supply tightness.

BUTTER:

Butter is finding more support as buyers are aggressively increasing ownership through the end of the year. Lower butter production due to labor shortages and the desire to sell cream rather than churn it has left inventory unable to gain on last year remaining 21% lower. Price should hold and develop an upper trading range.




Friday, August 26, 2022

Friday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Close Strong for the Week

MILK

It has been a very good week for Class IV milk with support stemming from increasing butter and nonfat dry milk prices. Futures have increased about $3.00 in some contracts from the low 2 1/2 weeks ago. Class III futures have not moved quite that much but seem to be building a base of support. Cheese prices have not been as supportive to futures as butter price has been. Class IV futures indicate prices will remain above Class III for some time to come as Class IV futures are above Class III all through next year. There may be some limitation to the level at which Class III milk futures will increase unless cheese prices will begin to trend higher. The Pro Farmer crop tour took place this week and it showed a significant reduction of corn yields in many areas. The average yield for corn is 168.1 bushels per acre with a production of 13.759 billion bushels. This compares to USDA's estimate of 175.4 bushels per acre and a production of 14.359 billion bushels. Soybeans are estimated at 51.7 bushels per acre with a production of 4.535 billion bushels. This compares to USDA at 51.9 bushels per acre with a production of 4.530 billion bushels. This will mean higher corn prices.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.38
6 Month: $20.94
9 Month: $20.89
12 Month: $20.82

CHEESE

For the week, blocks declined 8 cents closing at $1.74 with five loads traded. barrel cheese price declined 1.25 cents with 18 loads traded. Dry whey price increased 2 cents with four loads traded. Block moved back to the lowest level since January 27. Any rally of price continues to fail resulting price moving down to new lows. This has been the pattern since May. Support remains elusive.

BUTTER

For the week, butter gained 14.50 cents with 43 loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk gained 4 cents with nine loads traded. The breakout of butter price above the previous high indicates it may be a time before price will fall back below $3.00. Price moved back to the highest level since September 24, 2015. Buyer interest remains strong.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn gained 11.25 cents closing at $6.6875. September soybeans jumped 52.75 cents closing at $16.0525 with September soybean meal up $20.10 per ton closing at $478.10. September wheat gained 15 cents closing at $7.8475. August live cattle declined $0.30 closing at $140.80. October crude oil gained $0.54 ending at $93.06 per barrel. The DOW fell 1,008 points at 32,283 while the NASDAQ fell 498 points closing at 12,142.




Friday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Weakness in Blocks Has Little Impact

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 11 Higher
SOYBEANS: 53 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $16.50 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.47 Higher
DOW JONES: 701 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 375 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $0.08 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 2 cents, closing at $1.74 and breaking below the previous low. There were two loads traded. Barrel cheese price increased 2 cents, closing at $1.8825 with three loads traded. The gain of barrels more than offset the decline of blocks. Dry whey price increased 0.50 cents, closing at 47 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures came under some pressure during spot trading as blocks weakened. However, that turned as traders saw the strength of barrels and the strength of butter. Class III futures are 2 to 41 cents higher. Butter price increased 4.75 cents, closing at $3.0825 with five loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price gained 1.50 cents, ending at $1.56 with two loads traded. Class IV futures are 3 to 38 cents higher. Butter futures are 0.47 to 1.90 cents higher. Dry whey futures are 1.75 to 2.00 cents higher.



 

Friday Morning Dairy Market Update - Traders Reluctant to Press the Downside

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Mixed
Class IV Milk Futures: Steady to 5 Higher
Butter Futures: 1 to 2 Higher

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 4 to 6 Higher
Soybean Futures: 8 to 12 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: $5 to $8 Higher
Wheat Futures: 5 to 7 Higher

MILK:

Milk futures posted some nice gains Thursday. Class III increased despite the decline of barrels. Traders seem reluctant to press the market to the downside, even though there is weakness in underlying cash. There is anticipation of demand improving, but there is caution being exercised as well due to the uncertainty of demand. Demand should increase seasonally, but it may not increase as much as it generally does through the end of the year. Milk production is slowly improving but may not increase as much as it did last year. That may be beneficial to keep milk prices higher. Milk futures are expected to be mixed prior to spot trading.

CHEESE:

Cheese has yet to find solid support. Even if prices increase, traders will be reluctant to buy into the market as price increases have been short-lived. Cheese output is steady but at a slower pace due to ongoing workforce issues. This leaves plants running near capacity of what can be manufactured rather than the capacity of plants. However, inventory is building.

BUTTER:

Price has good support which may keep it above $3.00 as the calendar moves toward fall. Trading activity on the daily spot market remains strong as buyers are not able to find everything they need from sources in the country. Yet, there is plenty available as sellers remain active.




Thursday, August 25, 2022

Thursday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Post a Strong Close

MILK

Milk plants indicate a slight increase in milk receipts in the Central Region. Cooler weather is improving cow comfort and feed intakes. Most of the rest of the country is still struggling with some hot weather and reduced milk production. That will change as time moves forward and Fall weather arrives. However, that certainly does not mean milk production will exceed the level of last year as it will need to improve at the same pace or greater as seasonal production increase takes place. Spot loads of milk in the Central Region are running from $3.00 lower to $1.00 higher than class. Even with milk moving from the region to the Southeast and East, there remains discounted milk available. USDA released the July Livestock Slaughter report which reports the number of dairy cattle slaughtered during the month. There were 230,100 dairy cattle slaughtered in July. This was a decrease of 2,900 head from June and a decrease of 17,800 head from July 2021. Cows are potentially being held onto longer due to there being fewer replacements available. The criteria for holding onto a cow may have changed from when replacements were plentiful.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.16
6 Month: $20.66
9 Month: $20.60
12 Month: $20.53

CHEESE

There is quite a bit of variation to demand across the country. Some plants indicate a slight increase of demand for cheese while others say demand has slipped recently. Some of this may be variety specific. Be that as it may, demand is reported to be lighter than previous years. The economy is having an impact on demand overall as consumers are struggling with higher prices of everything. One thing that is beneficial at this time of year is football season. That generally increases demand for cheese and other dairy products.

BUTTER

Price seems to be establishing another higher range. How long buyers will remain as aggressive as they have beenis unclear, but with inventory 21% below a year ago, the market should remain supported. Demand for butter has remained nearly steady the past few weeks, but year-to-date volumes are beginning to lag a year ago. However, buyers are not shy about purchasing at the current price level as they feel downside potential is limited.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn declined 8.25 cents ending at $6.5750. September soybeans declined 8.25 cents closing at $15.52.50 with September soybean meal down $9.70 per ton closing at $458.00. September wheat fell 25.25 cents closing at $7.6975. August live cattle declined $0.22 closing at $141.10. October crude oil declined $2.37 closing at $92.52 per barrel. The DOW gained 323 points closing at 33,292 while the NASDAQ gained 208 points closing at 12,639.




Thursday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Barrel Cheese Slips

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 4 Lower
SOYBEANS: 4 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $7.20 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.02 Lower
DOW JONES: 79 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 121 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.79 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price remained steady at $1.76 with no loads traded. Barrel cheese price declined 1.25 cents, closing at $1.8625 with two loads traded. The fact there were trades gave some hope for price support near this level. Dry whey increased 0.50 cent, ending at 46.50 cents with one load traded. Class III futures are holding well with only September and October showing losses of 6 cents and 2 cents, respectively. The rest of the contracts are 7 to 18 cents higher. Butter bounced back 3.50 cents to close at $3.0350 with 11 loads traded. The level of $3.00 might be the new support level. Grade A nonfat dry milk price gained 0.50 cent, closing at $1.5450 with two loads traded. Class IV futures are 20 to 43 cents higher. Butter futures are 1.82 cents lower to 2.97 cents higher. Dry whey futures are unchanged to 1.80 cents higher. USDA will release the July Livestock Slaughter report Thursday, showing dairy cattle slaughter for the month.




Fluid Milk and Cream - Western U.S. Report 34

Throughout California milk output is mixed. High temperatures in some parts of the state are     having a negative impact on production, while contacts in some areas say milk output is     steady. The NASS Milk Production report released on August 22 showed July production was up     by 2.2 percent from 2021. Milk is available for processing in the state, and some    stakeholders say they are moving additional loads of milk to other states where supplies are     tighter. Class I demand is trending higher, while demands for Class II and III are     unchanged. 
In Arizona high temperatures continue to have a negative impact on milk production. Some milk processors in the state say local volumes are sufficient to meet production needs, while others are bringing loads from nearby states. Demand for Class I is trending higher due to increased educational purchasing. Meanwhile, demands for Class II and III are unchanged. 
Milk production is steady to lower in New Mexico. The NASS Milk Production report released data on August 22 showing that July milk output was down in New Mexico by 8.1 percent from last year. Processors in the plant are bringing loads of milk in from other parts of the region to meet current production needs. Demand is steady across all Classes. 
High temperatures in the Pacific Northwest are contributing to a continued decline in milk output. Contacts report milk production is below previously forecasted levels. Despite this, processors can obtain milk locally to meet their production needs. Some plant managers say they are running reduced production schedules due to labor shortages. Contacts report these reduced schedules are contributing to increased milk availability. Across all Classes, demand is unchanged. 
Milk production is declining in the mountain states of Idaho, Utah, and Colorado. Contacts say seasonally high temperatures are reducing cow comfort and having a negative impact on milk output. Milk volumes are available for processing. Milk is being sold at a discount in the area; some plant managers say this is due to labor shortages and limited tanker availability. Increased educational purchasing is contributing to higher Class I demand. Meanwhile, demands for Classes II and III are unchanged. 
Demand for condensed skim is strong. Contacts say contract purchasers are pulling near the higher ends of their availability. Ice cream makers are purchasing condensed skim and cream to run busy production schedules. Cream inventories are tightening amid strong demand and declining cream production. High cream multiples and labor shortages have caused some butter makers in the region to sell additional loads of cream in recent weeks. Cream multiples are unchanged in the West.

     Western U.S., F.O.B. Cream
     Price Range - All Classes; $/LB Butterfat:   3.2632 - 4.3311
     Multiples Range - All Classes:               1.1000 - 1.4600
     Price Range - Class II; $/LB Butterfat:      3.8565 - 4.3311
     Multiples Range - Class II:                  1.3000 - 1.4600




Thursday Morning Dairy Market Update - Traders Cautious Over Price Direction

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Mixed
Class IV Milk Futures: 5 to 10 Lower
Butter Futures: 1 to 2 Lower

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 5 to 7 Higher
Soybean Futures: Mixed
Soybean Meal Futures: $2 to $3 Lower
Wheat Futures: 5 to 7 Lower

MILK:

The selling pressure on milk futures was not as great as it could have been. Traders seem to be reluctant to press the market to the downside. Lower prices and time of year could limit downside price potential. However, with production running slightly above a year ago and inventory 5% higher than a year ago, it is uncertain how low milk prices could go. Strong corn prices due to the impact of variable weather on the crop could provide support in the larger picture, but not in the immediate future. Milk production is likely near its low point with increases likely seen over time. USDA will release the July Livestock Slaughter report Thursday, which contains dairy cattle slaughter for the month.

CHEESE:

Block cheese price moving below the previous low, putting price back to the lowest level since January, was certainly not friendly to the market. Sellers continue to offer product to the market as inventory continues to build. Buyers are purchasing but do not need to be as aggressive due to the availability of supply. Less milk being available for manufacturing due to increased bottling for schools could reduce supply over time.

BUTTER:

Price much over $3.00 seems to be a buyer resistance level. Price could move back into the range below $3.00 again Thursday. Demand is good with inventory lower, but higher prices may limit consumer buying. A report Wednesday indicated there are 20 million households that are struggling to pay their energy bills due to the high prices of everything. This may have an impact on dairy demand as we move to the winter months.




Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Set Back

MILK

Class III milk futures settled back more than Class IV as Class III contracts needed to correct further. However, even with the correction, it seemed the market was less willing to give up gains compared to previous times of underlying price weakness. Traders seem to be a bit more reluctant to sell into the market. One would have to think Fall and holiday demand would have some impact on prices as buyers would be stepping up a little more to increase ownership at these lower prices rather than possibly chasing it higher to some extent later. Buyers seem to be content to continue to purchase on an as-needed basis. Milk production increased slightly in July and is expected to increase further as the weather cools improving cow comfort and feed intakes. Class I fluid milk demand is increasing as schools are open with other schools opening over the next 2 weeks. USDA will release the July Livestock Slaughter report tomorrow. The report contains dairy cattle slaughter of which we will be able to compare the slight increase of cow numbers on the milk production report to slaughter numbers.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.13
6 Month: $20.55
9 Month: $20.46
12 Month: $20.39

CHEESE

It is reported that the volatility of cheese on the spot market has increased some interest of buyers to step up and purchase some cheese ahead of time rather than continue to purchase on an as-needed basis. It certainly does not appear that is taking place, but much of this could be taking place with higher sales volume in the country rather than aggressive buying on the daily spot market. Demand is termed as steady to slightly higher in the Midwest.

BUTTER

Price may fall back into the range it has been in for quite some time. It seems anything over $3.00 meets with price resistance. There has been quite a bit of activity over the past weeks in the spot market even at these higher prices. Buyers have not been shy about increasing ownership for later demand. Strong buying may slow once buyers have sufficient on hand for expected demand.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn gained 5.75 cents closing at $6.6575. September soybeans declined 6 cents ending at $15.6075 with September soybean meal down $0.80 ending at $467.70 per ton. September wheat gained 12.25 cents closing at $7.95. August live cattle declined $0.30 closing at $141.32. September crude oil gained $1.15 closing at $94.89 per barrel. The DOW gained 60 points closing at 32,969 while the NASDAQ gained 50 points closing at 12,432.




Wednesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Milk Futures Lose Early Strength

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN:
Unchanged
SOYBEANS: 10 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: $0.90 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.15 Lower
DOW JONES: 18 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 54 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.46 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined a penny to $1.76 with one load traded. Price is down at the lowest level since Jan. 27. Barrel cheese price declined 0.50 cent, closing at $1.8750 with four loads traded. Dry whey price remained unchanged at 46 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures were under some pressure prior to spot trading after trading higher overnight and this morning. However, selling began to be more aggressive prior to spot trading in anticipation of lower cheese prices and the fact that the market moved substantially higher even after spot price traded lower Tuesday. Futures are now making a correction with contracts ranging from 39 cents lower to 17 cents higher. Butter price fell back to $3.00, a loss of 5.50 cents with 11 loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price declined 0.50 cent, closing at $1.54 with no loads traded. Class IV futures are 24 cents lower to 22 cents higher. Butter futures are 4.97 cents lower to 0.15 cent higher. Dry whey futures are 0.45 to 2.00 cents higher.




Wednesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Overnight Trade Shows Further Strength

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: 10 to 25 cents higher
Class IV Milk Futures: 10 to 15 Higher
Butter Futures: 1 to 2 Higher

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 7 to 10 Higher
Soybean Futures: 12 to 18 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: $3 to $5 Higher
Wheat Futures: 7 to 10 Higher

MILK:

Milk futures had a banner day Tuesday. Class III prices rallied despite the weakness of cheese prices. Class IV futures showed strong gains of as much at $1.00, supported by stronger butter and nonfat dry milk. There is no shortage of milk for bottling or processing. However, more milk is moving from processing to bottling as schools either are in session or will be in session shortly. Bottlers have been busy filling school pipelines. It is surprising the market has been so strong after the July Milk production report showed an increase of 0.2%. This is a minor increase of production over last year, but the fact that it was the first increase so far this year and that it took place during the period of the year when record temperatures were set in many areas makes it surprising futures have shown the strong gains. There has been no other fundamental news impacting the market.

CHEESE:

Block cheese price is within 0.50 cent of matching the low of Aug. 4. Moving below that level would push it back to the level last seen in January. It will be interesting to see whether buyers will step back in more aggressively due to the decline of prices.

BUTTER:

Butter seems to be building greater support, which could result in price trading in a new higher range with $3.00 being support. Buyers have been aggressive as they seek to increase ownership for demand through the end of the year. Inventory remains below a year ago with international demand remaining strong.




Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Tuesday Closing Dairy Market Update - South Dairy Trade Prices Mixed

MILK

Futures showed some incredible gains with gains far exceeding the movement of underlying cash. Double-digit gains were seen in Class III futures through March 2024 contracts. The only exception was front-month August with a decline of a penny and the November 2023 contract with a decline of 7 cents. The January 2024 contract closed 68 cents higher. Class IV futures outpaced Class III posting gains of as much as $1.00 as seen in the December contract. Strong gains were seen through the August 2023 contract. South Dairy Trade prices and volumes were released today. Argentina had 10,565.31 tons moving through ports to 24 destinations at an average price of $4,480.04 per ton during July 1 through July 15. Whole milk powder declined 1.7% from the previous report to $4,363.20 per ton or $1.98 per pound. Skim milk powder gained 0.4% to $4,047.08 per ton or $1.84 per pound. Semi-hard cheese increased 1.2% to $4,796.55 per ton or $2.18 per pound. Hard cheese gained 6.6% to $6,365.93 per ton or $2.89 per pound. Butter gained 3.2% to $5,487.02 per ton or $2.49 per pound. Buttermilk declined 4.2% to $3,150.00 or $1.43 per pound. Uruguay had 10,439.32 tons going to 24 destinations at an average price of $4,235.58 per ton during the period from August 1 through August 15. Whole milk powder declined 2.9% from the previous report to $4,055.26 per ton or $1.64 per pound. Skim milk powder gained 8.7% to $4,273.93 per ton or $1.94 per pound. Semi-hard cheese increased 5.0% to $4,810.37 per ton or $2.18 per pound. Hard cheese declined 9.1% to $5,929.32 per ton or $2.69 per pound. Butter declined 2.4% to $5,745.98 per ton or $2.61 per pound. Buttermilk declined 5.7%to $4,537.32 per ton or $2.06 per pound.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $20.31
6 Month: $20.76
9 Month: $20.62
12 Month: $20.50

CHEESE

The weakness of cheese did not phase the bullishness of trading activity today. It was one of those "scratch your head" days as futures moved substantially higher while underlying cash declined. There was no other fundamental news that was responsible for the large price gains. Hopefully, this is an indication of cash strength the rest of the week.

BUTTER

Strong demand for butter is keeping price elevated. There was good trading activity in the spot market as buyers remained aggressive at higher prices. Buyers seem to be actively looking to increase ownership for later demand.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

September corn jumped 26.50 cents closing at $6.60. September soybeans jumped 39.75 cents closing at $15.6675 with September soybean meal up $8.00 per ton closing at $468.50. September wheat gained 12.25 cents ending at $7.8275. August live cattle gained $0.40 ending at $141.62. September crude oil jumped $3.38 ending at $93.74 per barrel. The DOW declined 154 points ending at 32,910 while the NASDAQ was unchanged at 12,381.




Tuesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Milk Futures Defy Underlying Cash

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 27 Higher
SOYBEANS: 47 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $9.10 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.47 Higher
DOW JONES: 106 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 32 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $3.33 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 5 cents closing at $1.77 with two loads traded. Barrel cheese price declined 1.50 cents closing at $1.88 with nine loads traded. Blocks came within 0.50 cents of the low from earlier this month. Dry whey price increased a penny to 46 cents with three loads traded. It is surprising to see the strength of Class III futures after cheese traded lower. Contracts are 2 cents lower to 51 cents higher. Front-month August is the only contract posting a loss as that will move very little prior to the end of the contract. Butter price increased 3.50 cents closing at $3.0550 with 14 loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price increased 1.25 cents with two loads traded. Class IV futures are 22-77 cents higher with October showing the greatest gain. Butter futures are 0.50-1.31 cents higher. Dry whey futures are steady.




Friday Closing Dairy Market Update - Fluid Milk Sales Increase

MILK It was a volatile week for Class III futures, but prices at the end of this week were not much higher than at the end of last w...