Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Tuesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Cattle Inventory Report Shows 2% Less Milk Cow Replacements

MILK

The minor decline of block cheese was magnified in Class III futures with contracts through the end of the year posting double-digit losses. It seems that traders are throwing in the final bullish part of the towel putting pressure on later contracts. USDA released the December Agricultural Prices report and without the final soybean meal price, it indicates no Dairy Margin Coverage payment for the month, The average corn price was $6.58, an increase of $0.09 from November. The premium/supreme hay price was $327.00, a decrease of $4.00 per ton. The All-milk price was $24.70, down $0.90 from November. The soybean meal price is expected to be higher than November but not enough to trigger a payment as the income over feed price in November was $10.89. FSA has not yet released that price. Other prices to note that are not used in the calculation was the average soybean price was $14.40, an increase of $0.40. The alfalfa price averaged $269.00, up $2.00 from November. The Semi-annual Cattle Inventory report showed the number of dairy cattle on January1 at 9.403 million head which was just slightly higher than a year ago. Milk cow replacement heifers totaled 4.337 million head, down 2% from a year ago. there was nothing surprising in that report.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $17.76
6 Month: $18.24
9 Month: $18.67
12 Month: $18.82

CHEESE

It was interesting to see the pressure that was put on Class III futures with only a penny decline of block cheese. Traders finally saw the futility of holding out hope for higher prices in the foreseeable future. Now, it is a long year ahead and much can change, but the futures market is an anticipatory market and right now that is what traders are anticipating. At least the block/barrels spread is moving closer together.

BUTTER

There was a lot of buying interest for butter today in the spot market. Along with the buying, there also would have been selling and the sellers did not hold back. Butter supply is increasing, and they want to continue to move product rather than hold and wait to see if buyers will be more aggressive. World prices show weakness which may eventually be seen with lower exports.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn declined 4 cents closing at $6.7975. March soybeans gained 2.75 cents ending at $15.38 with March soybean meal down $4.50 closing at $484.20 per ton. March wheat gained 8.75 cents closing at $7.6125. February live cattle gained $0.10 closing at $158.85. March crude oil gained $0.97 ending at $78.87 per barrel. The Dow gained 369 points closing at 34,086 while the Nasdaq gained 191 closing at 11,585.




Tuesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Butter Price Drops Back

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 4 Lower
SOYBEANS: 2 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $5.30 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.02 Higher
DOW JONES: 186 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 119 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.86 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined a penny Tuesday closing at $1.87 with one load traded. Barrel cheese price remained steady to $1.58 with 2 loads traded. The weakness of blocks put significant pressure on Class III milk futures with double-digit losses permeating throughout the whole of this year. Futures are 26 cents lower to 3 cents higher. The only gain is in front-month January which goes off the board Tuesday. Dry whey price was unchanged at 32 cents with no loads traded. Butter price declined 4.75 cents closing at $2.3050 with 22 loads traded. There were no unfilled bids or uncovered offers remaining at the close as business was completed. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained steady to $1.1525 with no loads traded. There has only been activity in the January Class IV contract with price unchanged. Butter futures are 0.65 to 2.00 cents lower. Dry whey futures are steady to 1.00 cent lower. Tuesday is the final trading day for January futures and options with the Federal Order Prices being announced Wednesday. USDA will release the December Agricultural Prices report Tuesday and the Bi-annual Cattle Inventory report.




American Dairy Coalition Sets 2023 Policy Priorities

American Dairy Coalition, a grassroots dairy farmer-led organization with diverse geographic representation, recently announced federal policy priorities and an action plan for 2023. American Dairy Coalition CEO Laurie Fischer says, “Our ongoing efforts have been focused on raising awareness of short- and long-term challenges.” One key short-term priority is to see the Class I milk price 'mover' returned to its previous 'higher of' formula in the 2023 Farm Bill. For the long-term, the coalition seeks a national Farm Bill hearing on the sustainability of Federal Milk Marketing Orders. Fischer says, “The systemic issues of declining fluid milk sales and declining FMMO participation create instability and uncertainty for dairy farmers.” ADC also supports restoring whole milk in federal nutrition programs like National School Lunch and Breakfast Programs and WIC. This includes exempting nutrient-dense foods like whole milk from the fat limits the Dietary Guidelines impose on nutrition programs and dairy checkoff promotions.




Tuesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Erratic Cash Keeps Traders Guessing

OPENING CALLS:

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

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 2 to 3 Lower
Soybean Futures: 6 to 8 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: $2 to $4 Lower
Wheat Futures: 6 to 8 Lower

MILK:

Milk futures lack the support to trend higher. The recent friendly milk production report was pointing ahead to support down the road if cow numbers continue to decrease. Current milk supply is sufficient for demand, keeping plants running mostly full. Inventories are building as they generally will during the first half of the year. Overall weather continues to be good for cow comfort and feed intake. USDA will release the December Agricultural Prices report Tuesday, providing the average prices used in calculating income over feed used for the Dairy Margin Coverage program. That is except for soybean meal as that is an average calculated on a weekly basis and released by the Farm Service Agency. I am not expecting a payment under the program as income over feed should be above the $9.50 payment level. The Bi-annual Cattle Inventory report will report the number of dairy cows and heifers in the nation's herd on Jan. 1.

CHEESE:

The volatility of spot cheese keeps traders guessing as to price direction. It is also sending traders to the sidelines as they wait it out. Traders have some premium in cheese futures but are not overly optimistic. However, low prices and the potential for increased culling and maybe a tighter milk supply later in the year should keep premium in the market.

BUTTER:

The bounce of butter price is expected to be minimal and short-lived. Supply is readily available with churning active. International butter prices are lower, which may eventually impact export activity. Butter futures have limited premium to current cash in later contracts.



Monday, January 30, 2023

Monday Closing Dairy Market Update - Class III Futures Remain Under Pressure

MILK

Class III futures were under pressure due to the fall of block cheese overshadowing the gain of barrels. Each time underlying cash bounces up, it moves to a lower low after the brief gain. Even though cow numbers declined from November, there is still sufficient milk available for demand. Even with cow numbers decreasing, the nation's dairy herd in December was higher than it was a year earlier. This may change with continued high feed prices and lower milk prices. USDA will release the December Agricultural Prices report tomorrow containing the prices used for calculating income over feed. I do not expect a Dairy Margin coverage payment with income over feed likely above the $9.50 limit. This is the final call for anyone who wants to sign up for the Dairy Margin Coverage program for this year as the deadline is tomorrow. You would need to contact your FSA office to sign up. USDA will also release the Bi-annual Cattle Inventory report tomorrow. The average analyst estimates the dairy herd to be slightly lower than a year ago, but I think there is a strong possibility it will be slightly higher based on the recent milk production report.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.40
6 Month: $18.44
9 Month: $18.80
12 Month: $19.02

CHEESE

Price swings continue in this market but the swings to the upside show less strength. This results in lower highs. It is possible price may break below the previous lows of a little over a week ago. Cheese production continues to run strong meeting demand as well as building inventory. Demand is variable depending on the variety and the area. Barrels are in a more plentiful supply situation than blocks as indicated by the wide block/barrel spread.

BUTTER

Buyers wanted to take advantage of a lower price to possibly increase ownership for upcoming Spring demand. They are not aggressive with purchases to build inventory or even with forward contracting unlike they were a year ago. Much of last year was supported by the fear of tightening supply. That is not the case currently.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn gained 0.75 cents closing at $6.8375. March soybeans jumped 25.75 cents closing at $15.3525 with March soybean meal up $15.20 per ton closing at $488.70. March wheat gained 2.50 cents closing at $7.5250. February live cattle gained $2.02 ending at $158.75. March crude oil declined $1.78 per barrel closing at $77.90. The Dow declined 261 points closing at 33,717 while the Nasdaq fell 228 points closing at 11,394.




Monday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Block Cheese Falls Back

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 2 Higher
SOYBEANS: 28 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $16.30 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $1.85 Higher
DOW JONES: 118 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 184 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $1.33 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price fell 8 cents closing at $1.88 with one load traded. price initially fell to $1.87 before an unfilled bid moved price off the low. Barrel cheese price gained 2.75 cents closing at $1.58 with six loads traded. Price initially moved down to $1.56 before buyers became more aggressive. There were 14 unfilled bids remaining at the close with 10 of those bids significantly below the market. Dry whey price declined 0.75 cents closing at 32 cents with 5 loads traded. Class III futures are 20 cents lower to 7 cents higher with the November contract showing the only gain with the trade taking place prior to spot trading. Both February and March contracts are trading below $18.00. Butter price jumped 8 cents closing at $2.3525 with two loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained steady at $1.1525 with two loads traded. Class IV futures are mixed with only two contract months traded. March is down 15 cents with April up 4 cents. Butter futures show limited activity with contracts 0.25 cents lower to 1.00 cent higher. Dry whey futures are 0.02 cents lower to 0.25 cents higher.




Export demand for cheese remains steady

Things look a little better globally. The second Global Dairy Trade event of 2023 saw its weighted average slip just 0.1% following a 2.8% drop Jan. 3 and 3.8% Dec. 20, 2022.

 Traders brought 70.3 million pounds of product to market, down from the 73.8 million Dec. 20. The average metric ton price inched up to $3,393, up from $3,365 Jan. 3.


Cheddar buoyed the market, up 4%, after falling 2.7% Jan. 3. Whole milk powder inched 0.1% higher, after falling 1.4% last time. Skim milk powder was down 0.3%, after dropping 4.3%. Anhydrous milk fat led the declines, down 0.9%, following a 5.1% drop, and butter was off 0.6%, after dropping 2.8%.


StoneX Dairy Group said the GDT 80% butterfat butter price equates to $1.9687 per pound, down 1.4 cents, after losing 5.5 cents last time, and compares to CME butter which closed Friday at $2.3225. GDT cheddar, at $2.2097, was up 8.2 cents, and compares to Friday’s CME block cheddar at $1.8350. GDT skim milk powder averaged $1.2891 per pound, up from $1.2874, and whole milk powder averaged $1.4598 per pound, up from $1.4552. CME Grade A nonfat dry milk closed Friday at $1.1750 per pound.


Buyers in North Asia, which includes China, were less engaged in this event, according to Dustin Winston, as volume purchased fell from both the last event and last year. South East Asia, the Middle East and South/Central America were the only regions whose purchases exceeded year-ago levels.


HighGround Dairy said unless there’s massive buying from China post-Lunar New Year, it believes that whole milk powder remains in a quiet state with little volatility ahead. The current freight differential between the U.S. and EU makes European-sourced skim milk powder more attractive, and buyers of U.S. product remain in wait-and-see mode. China’s butter volume dropped to its lowest levels in three months and the contract two price is at lows not seen since July 2021.    

   
StoneX said for now, the expected rebound in demand from China is somewhat more satisfied by strong domestic production rather than their usual thirst for external sourced product. It is still largely cheaper to import dairy, but it doesn’t advance their agenda. While domestic milk production is strong in China, domestic demand suffers from COVID-19. And protein margins are weaker heading into 2023.


Chinese imports in December 2022 were actually much better than expected, according to StoneX, up 14.5% from last year. Exports out of the major exporters to China were down 30% during November. Since most of that product lands in China during December, we were expecting Chinese imports to be down at least 20%. But comparing this December-January to previous December-January periods is tricky.


China has a free trade agreement with New Zealand that allows a limited amount of dairy products into China at a reduced tariff rate on a first-come basis. So in the past we’ve seen New Zealand shipments to China surge in November and December, but then sit in customs and not clear through until January to take advantage of the reduced tariff. However, the volume of product eligible for this reduced tariff is reportedly zero in 2023, which means there is no incentive to clear the product through customs in January versus December, said StoneX.


Chinese importers didn’t sit on product in December like they have in the past, they just pulled it all through customs. That is how we end up with exports to China down 30% and official Chinese imports up 14.5%, or at least we think that is what is going on here. If we’re right, January imports could be down 30%-40% from last year since a lot of product cleared in December and wasn’t held over into January, StoneX said.  


One more bit of GDT news; Charlie Hyland has been appointed as independent chair of the GDT Board of Directors, effective Feb. 1. Hyland is head of Europe, Middle East and Asia dairy and food at StoneX.


U.S. dairy exports continue via the Cooperatives Working Together program. Member cooperatives accepted 30 offers of export assistance this week that helped them capture sales contracts for 3.2 million pounds of American-type cheese and 311,000 pounds of cream cheese.


The product is going to customers in Asia, Middle East-North Africa and Oceania, and will be delivered through July. The sales are the equivalent of 32 million pounds of milk on a milkfat basis.


Looking to the last 12 months, CWT-assisted sales were the equivalent of 1.193 billion pounds of milk on a milkfat basis, according to the CWT.


CME dairy prices headed lower in the shortened Martin Luther King Day holiday week. The cheddar blocks closed Friday at $1.8350 per pound, down 16.50 cents on the week, lowest since Sept. 6, 2022, but 2.75 cents above a year ago.


The barrels finished at $1.58, 12.75 cents lower on the week, lowest since Nov. 29, 2021, 23.25 cents below a year ago, and 25.50 cents below the blocks, which may be reflecting actual supply and demand. Sales totaled five cars of block and 12 of barrel on the week, as the annual IDFA Dairy Forum kicked off in Orlando.


The cheese demand spectrum has widened from week two, said Dairy Market News. Some processors continue to say demand remains quiet, while others, namely retail cheddar and Italian pizza style cheesemakers, said orders have picked up some. Milk availability has not changed, and spot prices were as low as $10 under Class again this week, fourth week in a row. Cheese output is therefore plentiful though some plants say upcoming scheduled maintenance could keep even more downward pressure on available milk. Market tones are a little uncertain, said DMN, but there is plenty of processing going on.


Demand for cheese is unchanged in western retail markets, though some report strengthening food service sales. Football playoffs are contributing to increased demand for mozzarella from pizza makers in the region. Export demand remains steady, though lower international prices may lighten that demand going forward. Sales to Asian markets are strong. Milk is plentiful in the region and cheesemakers are busy, though labor shortages and continued delayed deliveries of supplies is keeping some plants from operating full schedules.


Butter fell to a Friday finish at $2.3225 per pound, lowest since Dec. 27, 2021, down 10.25 cents on the week, and 61.25 cents below a year ago when it jumped 21 cents. There was only one sale on the week at the CME.


Cream is readily available, reports DMN, though cream prices rose somewhat midweek. Churning has been busy. Butter demand is meeting seasonal expectations. Plant management is focused on spring holiday inventory readiness, said DMN. Market tones are holding somewhat firm.


The West continues to see plenty of cream which was outpacing demand in some cases. Butter production remains strong. Unsalted butter stocks remain tighter than salted as availability continues to work toward balancing with demand. Butter demand is unchanged. Some contacts report first quarter sales being covered, but a lagging start to second, third and fourth quarter sales, as hesitation remains for booking into the remaining quarters of 2023, said DMN.


Grade A nonfat dry milk fell to the lowest level it has seen since March 26, 2021, closing Friday at $1.1750 per pound, down 8 cents on the week and 64 cents below a year ago. There were 20 loads that exchanged hands on the week.


 Powder prices in Europe have also been under a tremendous amount of pressure, according to StoneX, as they deal with increasing production and weak demand which has caused concerns over inventory levels.


Dry whey closed Friday at 32.50 cents per pound, 0.75 cents lower on the week, lowest CME price since Aug. 13, 2020, and 47.50 cents below a year ago. There were 16 sales reported for the week at the CME.


The February Federal order Class I base milk price was announced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture at $20.78 per hundredweight, down $1.63 from January, 86 cents below February 2022, and the lowest Class I price in 12 months. It equates to $1.79 per gallon, down from $1.86 a year ago.


Part of the reason the Class I is falling is because fluid milk sales continue to flounder. The USDA’s latest data shows November sales of packaged fluid products at 3.69 billion pounds, down 2.9% from November 2021.


Conventional product sales totaled 3.5 billion pounds, down 2.7% from a year ago. Organic products, at 230 million pounds, were down 4.9%, and represented a typical 6.2% of total sales for the month.


Whole milk sales totaled 1.3 billion pounds, up 1.5% from a year ago, up 1.4% year to date, and represented 34.1% of total milk sales YTD.


Skim milk sales, at 187 million pounds, were down 8.7% from a year ago and down 8.5% YTD.


Total packaged fluid sales for the 11 months amounted to 39.5 billion pounds, down 2.3% from 2021. Conventional product sales totaled 36.9 billion pounds, down 2.4%. Organic products, at 2.6 billion, were down 1.2%, and represented 6.6% of total milk sales for the period.


The figures represent consumption in Federal Milk Marketing Order areas, which account for approximately 92% of total fluid milk sales in the U.S.


Checking other demand data, November U.S. total cheese disappearance hit 1.197 billion pounds, up just 0.4% from November 2021, and it was only up that much because of exports. Domestic utilization fell below the previous year for the first time since July 2022, according to HGD Dairy, off 0.4%, while exports, at 82.6 million pounds, were up 12.8%.


Butter utilization totaled 219 million pounds, down 6.1%, with domestic use down 11.3%. Exports, at 18.6 million pounds, were up 158.3%, highest since March 2014, according to HGD. YTD butter utilization was down 6.7% domestically, while exports were up 52.7%.


Nonfat dry milk utilization, at 191.8 million pounds, remained below a year ago for the sixth consecutive month, down 10.7% from a year ago, due to weak domestic demand which was down 33.1%, and had been poor throughout 2022. Exports totaled 155.2 million pounds, down 3% from a year ago, and down 7.2% YTD.


Dry whey exports amounted to 70.2 million pounds, down 5.3% from a year ago, with domestic use down 28.3%, and exports totaling 43.8 million were up 17.4%.


Speaking in the Jan. 23 Dairy Radio Now broadcast, HGD’s Eric Meyer referenced the above data and the falling CME product prices, levels not seen in months or years in some cases. He also warned of milk production growth in the northern hemisphere, specifically Europe, where he said output has turned positive the last few months.


He said we are still absent November data for a couple countries, but we expect a number that’s going to be close to 2% year-over-year growth. They’re having a significantly warmer winter season that’s leading to decent milk production growth, he said. So European dairy commodity prices have fallen, and it appears that the U.S. market is following.


Down on the farm, dairy culling in the U.S. was up in December but slightly below December 2021, according to the USDA’s latest livestock slaughter report.


An estimated 266,300 head were sent to slaughter under federal inspection, up 15,400 head from November but 1,500, or 0.6%, above December 2021. Culling for the year totaled 3.05 million head, down 59,100, or 1.9%, from a year ago.


Meanwhile, USDA’s monthly Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook, issued Jan. 19, said based on expectations of lower milk prices and steady to higher feed costs the number of milk cows is projected lower in 2023 at 9,405 million head, down 15,000 from last month’s report.


The USDA cattle report, which will be issued Jan. 31, is expected to provide a better sign of future changes in the dairy herd size, according to the Outlook. The average yield per cow projection for 2023 was unchanged at 24,370 pounds.  


Dairy export projections for 2023 were increased as domestic prices for dairy product are expected to be competitive compared to international prices.


The Outlook mirrored milk price and production projections in the Jan. 12 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report, which I previously reported.


Last but not least, the Jan. 13 Daily Dairy Report said a state of emergency has been declared for California as successive, intense storms batter the nation’s largest dairy state. The bomb cyclone slamming the state has brought gale force winds and widespread flooding that have caused vast property damage, evacuations and the loss of human life.
Not even two weeks into the new year, some areas of the state have already received over half their annual rainfall. The weather crisis has put California in the unusual position of simultaneously being under a state of emergency for both drought and flooding, according to the DDR.




Monday Morning Dairy Market Update - Mixed Overnight Trade Shows Uncertainty

OPENING CALLS:

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

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 2 to 4 Higher
Soybean Futures: 14 to 18 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: $3 to $6 Higher
Wheat Futures: 5 to 7 Higher

MILK:

Milk futures are struggling with the uncertainty of underlying cash prices. Even though there are price bounces, futures have been trending lower. The milk production report was thought to increase the longer-term buying interest in futures or to increase some buying of cheese or butter for later demand, but that so far has not been the case. Milk production still is holding above a year ago with bottling and manufacturing demand being met without difficulty. USDA will release the December Agricultural Prices report Tuesday, but it is not expected to show an income over feed below the payment trigger level of $9.50 under the Dairy Margin Coverage program.

CHEESE:

The weakness of barrel cheese Friday moved the block/barrel spread to 40.75 cents, which may be a record or near-record difference. What is interesting is that there were 34 loads of barrels traded on the spot market last week with buying interest unable to move price higher. Manufacturers want to move product.

BUTTER:

Price lost ground last week on limited trading activity. This does not bode well for the market. Churning is active with cream supply plentiful. Buyers see no reason to be concerned over supply and are limiting forward contracting activity. Price is anticipated to erode further in the near term.




Friday, January 27, 2023

Friday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Close Lower on the Week

MILK

Class III milk futures closed lower for the day with some contracts posting double-digit losses. The weakness of barrel cheese put pressure on prices. There had been some anticipation that traders would buy into the market more aggressively due to the reduction in cow numbers from the month of November as reported on the milk production report. However, that was short-lived as underlying cash did not share the same sentiment. Buyers and sellers of cheese are doing business based on supply and demand and not what a report says. Even with the decrease in cow numbers, milk production remained higher than a year ago. The key will be what the next few reports will say once they are released. An increase in culling might take place sooner than anticipated as feed prices continue to remain high. For now, milk supply is sufficient for demand with spot milk in the Central regions still showing discounts but not as much as they had been over the past month.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.52
6 Month: $18.53
9 Month: $18.86
12 Month: $19.07

CHEESE

Block and barrel cheese prices had quite a divergence this week with blocks up 12.50 cents while barrels declined 2.75 cents. The interesting aspect of this is that it created some volatility throughout the week but did little to change price from a week ago. In fact, some Class III contracts are lower than they were a week ago. There were five loads of blocks and 34 loads of barrels traded with most of the barrels traded yesterday and today. Dry whey gained 0.25 cents for the week with 18 loads traded.

BUTTER

For the week, butter declined 5 cents with three loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price declined 2.25 cents with 19 loads traded. Class IV futures just could not catch a break this week closing lower for the week. Butter may have limited upside potential as buyers are not concerned over supply and have expressed limited interest in aggressively establishing forward contracts.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn gained 0.50 cents closing at $6.83. March soybeans declined 14 cents closing at $15.0950 with March soybean meal down $3.60 per ton closing at $473.50. March wheat declined 2.50 cents ending at $7.50. February live cattle closed unchanged at $156.72. March crude oil declined $1.33 ending at $79.68 per barrel. The Dow gained 29 points ending at 33,978 while the Nasdaq gained 109 points closing at 11,622.




Friday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Barrel Cheese Erases Gains

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: Unchanged
SOYBEANS: 14 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: $3.10 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.02 Lower
DOW JONES: 74 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 129 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $1.69 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price remained unchanged at $1.96 with no load traded. Barrel cheese price declined 3.75 cents closing at $1.5525 with seven loads traded. It took a while before there were any bids or offers posted after the market opened for spot trading. Buyers and sellers were waiting to see who was going to tip their hand first. Sellers were the first to post offers. Dry whey price increased 1.50 cents closing at 32.75 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures turned from higher to lower with contracts ranging from 22 cents lower to 7 cents higher. Butter price increased 0.50 cents closing at $2.2725 with one load traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price declined a penny closing at $1.1525 with nine loads traded. Class IV futures have not yet traded with wide bid and offers with traders unwilling to buy into the market due to the weakness of nonfat dry milk. Butter futures are 0.05 cents lower to 0.75 cents higher. Dry whey futures are 0.72 cents lower to 0.02 cents higher.



Friday Morning Dairy Market Update - Traders Mixed Over Price Direction

OPENING CALLS:

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

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: Mixed
Soybean Futures: 1 to 4 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: Mixed
Wheat Futures: Mixed

MILK:

The rebound of closer Class III milk futures was nice to see, but the rebound failed to eliminate the loss of the previous day. Traders are not convinced the market will trend higher anytime soon. However, there seems to be some support due to the friendly aspect of the December Milk Production report showing a decrease in cow numbers from November. This may be setting a trend and if so, milk production may slow more rapidly than anticipated. Currently, milk production is steady to slightly higher across much of the country. Some lighter production is seen in California where rains have been heavy and open lots muddy. The large adjustment of 32 cents higher made in Class IV futures yesterday was in response to the weekly AMS prices. I have never seen an adjustment of that magnitude in reaction to weekly prices.

CHEESE:

There was a lot of trading activity in spot barrels yesterday. Buyers needed and wanted to pick up supply at lower prices and were able to find willing sellers. What is interesting is that even though buyers were more aggressive, sellers did not hold back as they many times do when seeing strength. Cheese supply is sufficient for demand.

BUTTER:

Butter is in an overall downtrend but is slowly declining. Buyers are obtaining sufficient supply in the country through regular channels leaving limited activity on the spot market. Supply is increasing and running above a year ago. Cream is readily available keeping churning active. Nonfat dry milk remains weak.




Thursday, January 26, 2023

Thursday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Prices Rebound

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 8 Higher
SOYBEANS: 19 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $10.50 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.72 Lower
DOW JONES: 125 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 127 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $1.09 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price increased 4.25 cents closing at $1.96 with one load traded and 2 unfilled bids remaining at the close. Barrel cheese price increased 1.75 cents, closing at $1.59 with 22 loads traded and one unfilled bid remaining. Dry whey price declined 1.75 cents closing at 31.25 with 7 loads traded. This is the lowest price since August 13, 2020. Class III futures are 1 cent lower to 19 cents higher. Butter price remained unchanged at $2.2675 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price slipped 0.25 cents ending at $1.1625 with one load traded. Class IV futures have only traded in the May contract, posting a loss of 24 cents. Butter futures are 0.10-1.25 cent higher. Dry whey futures are steady to 1.00 cent lower.



Thursday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Production Up 0.2% in 2022

MILK

Milk production is termed as generally steady across much of the country. It will take some time before the whole impact of excessive rain is known in California. Their production is currently termed as steady to lighter. During the month of December, milk production in California was up 0.3%. Milk per cow was steady with December 2021 at 2,030 pounds with cow numbers up 5,000 head from a year earlier. January is likely to show some significant differences. Fourth quarter milk production for the country was up 1.0% at 56.0 billion pounds compared to the fourth quarter the previous year. This put milk production up 0.2% for the year compared to 2021. Dairy cattle slaughter in December totaled 263,300 head, an increase of 12,400 head from November, but down 4,500 head from December 2021. This supports the decrease in cow numbers seen in the milk production report. Slaughter has been lower than the previous year for ten months. Slaughter increased from the previous month only in February and November. Cow numbers in December were 27,000 head more than December 2021. Dairy Farmers have until January 31st to sign up for the 2023 Dairy Margin Coverage program at the local FSA office.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.65
6 Month: $18.66
9 Month: $18.95
12 Month: $19.16

CHEESE

Milk supply remains somewhat heavy in the Central region but spot milk prices are not as steeply discounted as they had been for the past four weeks. However, this is not expected to tighten the market as milk supply remains sufficient for bottling and manufacturing needs. Some buying of cheese on the spot market today could have been the result of a concern over increased culling and tighter milk supply over time with buyers deciding price is low enough in order to begin purchasing for inventory. It is too early to know for sure as cheese inventory remains large.

BUTTER

Cream is available and churning is active. Inventory is now above year earlier levels with some indication food service demand has slowed. Overall butter demand at the retail level seems to be holding well. Buyers seem to be holding back anticipating price weakness in the near term.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn gained 7.75 cents ending at $6.8250. March soybeans jumped 21 cents closing at $15.2350 with March soybean meal up $11.60 per ton closing at $477.10. March wheat gained 11.25 cents closing at $7.5250. February live cattle declined $0.87 closing at $156.72. March crude oil gained 0.86 closing at $81.01 per barrel. The Dow gained 206 points closing at 33,949 while the Nasdaq gained 199 points closing at 11,512.



Fluid Milk and Cream - Western U.S. Report 4

In California, farm level milk output is steady to light. Some stakeholders note not being     sure yet what the full impact of dry lots turning into mud lots from the multiple heavy     rainfalls the state received during January thus far this year will be. Available milk     volumes continue to be worked through. All Classes have steady demand. Although some     stakeholders note January 2023 preliminary milk production reports show increases compared     to December, 2022, below forecasted milk production for January is also noted. January 2023     preliminary milk production reports showing decreased milk production compared to January     2022 is noted by some stakeholders. According to the California Department of Water     Resources, as of January 25, 2023, the estimated total statewide reservoir storage was 21.80     million acre feet, which is 98 percent of the historical average for the month. According to     the California Department of Water Resources, as of January 25, 2023, snowpack levels for     water year 2022-23 are 218 percent of normal to date compared to historical averages.  
Farm level milk output is steady to light in Arizona. Some stakeholders report bringing in extra milk from the southern part of the state at below Class IV prices and continuing to look for discounted out of state spot loads to fill available processing time. Some stakeholders note milk production is down compared to last year. Demand is steady across all Classes. 
New Mexico had more favorable weather for cow comfort this week and milk production is steady.     Processors work through available milk volumes. All Classes have steady demand. 
Favorable weather for cow comfort is helping the Pacific Northwest, with steady farm level milk     output. Plenty of milk is available for processing throughout the area. No transportation     problems are noted by stakeholders. Demand is unchanged for all Classes. 
Farm level milk output in the mountain states of Idaho, Utah and Colorado is steady. Throughout the area plenty of milk volumes are available for processing. Some stakeholders report selling spot loads to out of state purchasers at below Class prices. Demand is steady to light across all Classes. 
Demand for condensed skim milk is higher. Spot load sales are steady. Plentiful available cream volumes continue to be worked through by butter makers running busy production schedules. Lower end cream multiplies for all Classes remained at a flat market this week. Higher end cream multiplies were unchanged.

     Western U.S., F.O.B. Cream
     Price Range - All Classes; $/LB Butterfat:   2.3581 - 2.8297
     Multiples Range - All Classes:               1.0000 - 1.2000
     Price Range - Class II; $/LB Butterfat:      2.5939 - 2.8297
     Multiples Range - Class II:                  1.1000 - 1.2000



October - December 2022 Quarterly Milk Production - Mountain Region Highlights

Arizona dairy herds produced 1.17 billion pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, up 0.7 percent from the previous year.

Colorado dairy herds produced 1.32 billion pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, up 1.1 percent from the previous year.

Montana dairy herds produced 53.0 million pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, down 10.2 percent from the previous year.

New Mexico dairy herds produced 1.70 billion pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, down 4.4 percent from the previous year.

Utah dairy herds produced 531.0 million pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, down 1.5 percent from the previous year.

Wyoming dairy herds produced 61.0 million pounds of milk during the October - December quarter, up 8.5 percent from the previous year.






December Milk Production up 0.9 Percent

December Milk Production up 0.9 Percent 

Milk production in the 24 major States during December totaled 18.1 billion pounds, up 0.9 percent from December 2021. November revised production, at 17.4 billion pounds, was up 1.1 percent from November 2021. The November revision represented a decrease of 49 million pounds or 0.3 percent from last month's preliminary production estimate. Production per cow in the 24 major States averaged 2,032 pounds for December, 8 pounds above December 2021. The number of milk cows on farms in the 24 major States was 8.92 million head, 38,000 head more than December 2021, but 9,000 head less than November 2022. 

October-December Milk Production up 1.0 Percent 

Milk production in the United States during the October - December quarter totaled 56.0 billion pounds, up 1.0 percent from the October - December quarter last year. The average number of milk cows in the United States during the quarter was 9.41 million head, 4,000 head less than the July - September quarter, but 27,000 head more than the same period last year. 







Organic Farmers Association Applauds Additional Assistance for Dairy Farmers

The Organic Farmers Association welcomes this week's announcement of emergency financial relief to organic dairy farmers by the Department of Agriculture. The association has called on lawmakers and the Biden administration to help offset the high cost of production. USDA's Farm Service Agency fulfilled the mandate on time, announcing plans to distribute funding on Monday, January 23. The newly announced Organic Dairy Marketing Assistance Program will be administered by USDA's Farm Service Agency and will cover up to 75 percent of projected 2023 marketing costs for eligible organic dairy producers - targeting small and mid-sized operations. Organic Farmers Association Executive Director Kate Mendenhall says, "We applaud Congress for prioritizing family farms in crisis and prioritizing this emergency relief." New York organic dairy farmer Liz Bawden adds, "Organic dairies have had a very difficult two years, and this relief funding will hopefully make it to dairies in time to keep them in business." 




Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Thursday Morning Dairy Update - Milk Futures to Show Early Strength

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures:5 to 10 Higher
Class IV Milk Futures:Steady to 5 Higher
Butter Futures:Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures:1 to 3 Higher
Soybean Futures:5 to 8 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures:$1 to $3 Higher
Wheat Futures:2 to 4 Higher

MILK:

The bullish implication of the December Milk Production report could support milk futures until underlying cash shows direction. The decrease in cow numbers from November was a surprise indicating heavier culling is already taking place likely due to high feed prices. The December Livestock Slaughter report showed an increase in slaughter but at a lower level than a year earlier. It is difficult to predict how this will affect underlying cash buying today or in the near term due to the reports yesterday being for the month of December with the milk and dairy products already absorbed into the market. Cash buyers and sellers may not necessarily do business based on a report or technical trading activity.

CHEESE:

It is difficult to anticipate whether cheese prices fell enough to increase the interest of buyers today. Blocks did bounce off their lows which could cause sellers to hold back today waiting to see if buyers may be more aggressive. However, the recent bounce of cheese prices was not able to exceed the level of the previous bounce.

BUTTER:

The December Cold Storage report was somewhat bearish for butter with inventory for the year ending 9 percent higher than the previous year. Inventory increasing in December is not a usual event. It does happen but inventory generally declines. Spot butter is likely to see further weakness.



Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - December Milk Production Up 0.8%

MILK

Cow numbers were the surprise in the December Milk Production report. The top 24 states showed cow numbers declining 9,000 head from November with 50-state cow numbers down 8,000 head. This indicates culling is already increasing even though milk prices were at good levels in December. High feed prices are definitely having an impact. Milk production was up 0.9% in the top 24 states with production per cow 8 pounds higher than a year ago. Milk production in the country was up 0.8% with production per cow up 9 pounds from a year ago. This was a bit surprising due to the generally mild weather during the month. There were eight states which showed production declines in December. Florida showed the greatest loss of 12.7% followed by Virginia down 6.5%. New Mexico declined 4.8%; Washington was down 3.3%; Utah was down 2.2%; Illinois declined 2.0%; Oregon declined 0.5% and Minnesota was down 0.3%. The state with the largest increase was Georgia with an increase of 10.8% followed by South Dakota with an increase of 8.9%. Iowa gained 6.0% with the rest of the states posting gains of less than 4.0%.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.53
6 Month: $18.55
9 Month: $18.88
12 Month: $19.10

CHEESE

USDA released the December Cold Storage report which showed American cheese inventory increasing in December but unable to move above a year ago. Inventory increased 9.1 million pounds totaling 825.2 million pounds with stocks closing the year down 2.0% from a year ago. Swiss cheese stocks increased 1.8 million pounds totaling 24.2 million pounds which is 10% above a year ago. Other cheese inventory totaled 595.6 million pounds, an increase of 4.1 million pounds from November and 3.0% above a year ago. Total cheese stocks increased 14.1 million pounds above November 2021 to a total of 1.445 billion pounds.

BUTTER

Butter inventory growth was the big surprise with inventory gaining 16.5 million pounds, a gain of 8.0% from November. This moves butter inventory at the end of 2022 to 9.0% above the end of 2021. First of all, it is not typical to increase inventory in December and then to close the year 9.0% higher than last year when inventory was 22.0% below 2021 in August.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn declined 2.25 cents ending at $6.7475. March soybeans jumped 14 cents closing at $15.0250 with March soybean meal up $5.70 per ton closing at $465.50. March wheat closed 6.75 cents higher at $7.4125. February live cattle slipped $0.25 closing at $157.60. March crude oil gained $0.02 closing at $80.15. The Dow gained 10 points closing at 33,744 while the Nasdaq declined 21 points closing at 11,313.




Wednesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Prices Fall

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 1 Lower
SOYBEANS: 10 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $4.20 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.25 Lower
DOW JONES: 78 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 76 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $0.45 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price 7 cents ending at $1.9175 with two loads traded. Price initially fell to $1.90 before a buyer became more aggressive bringing price off the low. There was an unfilled bid remaining at the close below the market. Barrel cheese price declined 9.25 cents closing at $1.5725 with three loads traded and an uncovered offer remaining at the close. Dry whey price increased 0.50 cents ending at 33 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures are 40 cents lower to one cent higher. The only gain is in front-month January, as the market is mostly price and traders just move price relative to the weekly AMS report which will be released this afternoon. Butter price remained unchanged at $2.2675 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price slipped 0.25 cent closing at $1.1650. Price initially traded at $.1550 before buying interest increased. There were eight loads traded. Class IV futures have not yet traded with wide bid and offers. Butter futures are 0.97 cents lower to 0.50 cents higher. Dry whey futures are unchanged to 0.25 cents lower. USDA will release the December Milk Production and Cold Storage reports today. I estimate milk production to be up 1.2% from a year ago with cow numbers up 2,000 head from last month. Production per cow is expected to remain strong.




Wednesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Major Reports Released Today

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Mixed
Class IV Milk Futures: Steady to 5 Lower
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 1 to 2 Higher
Soybean Futures: 5 to 8 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: $1 to $2 Lower
Wheat Futures: 7 to 10 Higher

MILK:

Milk futures showed weakness yesterday in line with underlying cash. Traders are concerned about further weakness due to the lack of follow through buying in the spot market yesterday. USDA will release the December Milk Production report this afternoon. I estimate milk production to be up 1.2 percent from a year ago and cow numbers to show an increase of 2,000 head. Milk per cow is expected to be higher similar to what it has been much of the year. The December Cold Storage report will also be released at the same time. American cheese inventory may not have changed much from the previous year. Butter inventory may be near the same level it was a year ago.

CHEESE:

The slight weakness of cheese yesterday may keep buyers on the sidelines today. Sellers tested the market slightly but came up empty which may mean they will need to be more aggressive today if they intend to move product. Buyers are not concerned over supply and will purchase as necessary for immediate demand and wait for lower prices for building inventory for later demand.

BUTTER:

Price may see further pressure as supply is readily available and world demand is softening. How much more weakness we will see is difficult to predict. Increased production and lighter demand can rebuild inventory rapidly. There is a strong possibility the cold storage report may show butter stocks near the same level they were a year ago. This could set the stage for a significant inventory build this year.




Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Tuesday Closing Dairy Market Update - South Dairy Trade Showed Lighter Activity

MILK

Milk futures were steady to lower in most contracts. The minor weakness of underlying cash did little to get traders excited over the market. Early higher futures slipped lower after spot prices turned lower. USDA announced additional assistance to dairy farmers yesterday. A second round of payments through the Pandemic Assistance Program and an added Organic Dairy Marketing Assistance Program will be implemented for fluid milk sales between 5 million to 9 million pounds of milk sold from July through December 2020. Payments to farmers will be distributed through independent handlers and cooperatives. South Dairy Trade prices and volumes were released today for dairy products that passed through port in Argentina and Uruguay over a two-week period. In Argentina during the period from December 1-15, there were 10,853.28 tons of dairy products moved to 23 destinations at an average price of $3,944.59 per ton. The whole milk powder average price declined 3.9% from the previous report to $3,596.02 per ton or $1.63 per pound. Skim milk powder increased 3.3% to $3,707.09 per ton or $1.68 per pound. Semi-hard cheese declined 3.0% to $4,606.92 per ton or $2.09 per pound. Hard cheese declined 3.9% to $6,227.50 per ton or $2.83 per pound. Butter declined 4.5% to $,588.79 per ton or $2.08 per pound. Dairy products moving through ports in Uruguay during the period of January 1-15 totaled 3,507.73 tons to 21 destinations at an average price of 4,179.88 per ton. Whole milk powder increased 0.6% from the previous report to $3,714.15 per ton or $2.08 per pound. Skim milk powder increased 3.4% to $3,868.72 per ton or $1.76 per pound. Semi-hard cheese increased 0.1% to $4,998.31 per ton or $2.27 per pound. Hard cheese jumped 11.8% to $6,842.30 per ton or $3.11 per pound. Butter declined 1.8% to $5,304.43 per ton or $2.41 per pound. Buttermilk powder jumped 15.8% to $4,148.80 per ton or $1.88 per pound.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.75
6 Month: $18.76
9 Month: $19.03
12 Month: $19.23

CHEESE

Cheese prices held much of the gains of yesterday with sellers testing the waters today. Offers were lowered slightly to see if buyers would be willing to purchase. With little to no interest in buying today, sellers may be a bit more aggressive tomorrow. Underlying fundamentals do not suggest prices will trend higher and may only have limited upside potential.

BUTTER

Price may slowly erode for a time now that demand is easily being satisfied with supply from increased output. Cream supply is plentiful keeping churns busy. USDA will release the amount of inventory of dairy products for the month of December on the cold storage report tomorrow.

Outside Markets Summary

March corn jumped 10.75 cents closing at $6.77. March soybeans declined 1.75 cents ending at $14.8850 with March soybean meal down $2.10 per ton closing at $459.80. March wheat gained 14.50 cents closing at $7.3450. February live cattle closed $0.37 higher at $157.85. March crude oil declined $1.49 closing at $80.13 per barrel. The Dow increased 104 points ending at 33,734 while the Nasdaq declined 30 points ending at 11,334.




Monday Closing Dairy Market Update - Butter Inventory Declines Substantially

MILK: Trading volume in milk futures was light with only the January and February contracts showing a few hundred contracts trading ...