Friday, March 31, 2023

Friday Closing Dairy Market Update - February Income Over Feed: $6.19

MILK

Class III milk futures closed lower Friday in response to the weakness of cheese prices. However, they did not see the pressure that should have been put on them with the decline Friday and the magnitude of the decline this week. Traders have been very conservative, thinking the market may rebound next week. That has been a pattern over the past number of weeks during which weakness one week has been reversed to some degree the following week. The April contract did lose about $1 this week after gaining about $1 last week. Maybe the pattern will hold, and price will be higher next week. USDA released the February Agricultural Prices report Friday. Corn price averaged $6.80, an increase of $0.16 per bushels from January. The premium/supreme hay price was $324 per ton, down $4 per ton from the previous month. Soybean meal price averaged $500.63 per ton, up $18.13 per ton from January. The all-milk price was $21.60 per cwt, down $1.50 from January. This resulted in an income over feed price of $6.19. The payment under the Dairy Margin Coverage program will be $3.31 per cwt if the $9.50 level was chosen. This is the lowest income over feed price since August 2021.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.54
6 Month: $18.75
9 Month: $19.05
12 Month: $19.05

CHEESE

For the week, block cheese price fell 25 cents with only three loads traded. Barrel cheese price fell 15.50 cents with eight loads traded. It is interesting to note that cheese prices this week closed even lower than they were two weeks ago. It is surprising the weakness did not have a greater impact on the market. Dry whey gained 0.25 cent with one load traded. Traders will ponder over the weekend whether prices have fallen low enough to increase the interest of buyers or whether there is sufficient cheese available in the country without the need to come to the spot market.

BUTTER

Butter price gained 5.25 cents this week with 18 loads traded. It took back what was lost last week and then some. Grade A nonfat dry milk increased a penny with four loads traded. Price remains in a range with little reason to move outside of that range, as the market is balanced for the time being.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn gained 11 cents, closing at $6.6050. May soybeans jumped 31 cents, closing at $15.0550, with May soybean meal up $6.10 per ton, closing at $466. May wheat was unchanged at $6.9225. April live cattle gained $0.80, ending at $168.35. May crude oil gained $1.30 per barrel, ending at $75.67. The Dow gained 415 points, closing at 33,274, with the NASDAQ up 208 points, closing at 12,222.




Friday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Milk Futures Under Pressure

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 9 Higher
SOYBEANS: 29 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $5.60 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.62 Higher
DOW JONES: 257 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 146 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $1.14 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 7.50 cents, closing at $1.85 with two loads traded. There were six uncovered offers and one unfilled bid remaining at the close. Price has fallen back to the lowest level since March 13. Barrel cheese price declined 6.75 cents, ending at $1.8075 with seven loads traded. Price did decline to $1.8050 before rebounding slightly. There was one unfilled bid and two uncovered offers remaining at the close. Dry whey price increased 0.75 cent, closing at 44.75 with one load traded. Class III futures are 40 cents lower to a penny higher with the greatest loss being in April and the only gain in October. Butter price remained unchanged at $2.3975 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price gained 1.25 cents, closing at $1.16 with two loads traded. Class IV futures again have not yet traded. Butter futures 1.25 cents lower to 0.75 cent higher. Dry whey futures are 0.60 lower to 0.85 cent higher. USDA will release the February Agricultural Prices report providing average prices used in calculating income over feed for the Dairy Margin Coverage program.




Friday Morning Dairy Market Update - An Interesting Day Ahead

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: Steady to 10 Lower
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

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

MILK:

Class III milk futures have increased despite the weakness of cheese and dry whey prices. Friday may be a pivotal point as the divergence in prices cannot remain. Overnight trading was light and confirmed to April and May contracts with those contracts posting double-digit losses. However, many times, overnight trade is not a good indicator of the direction of the market during the day. Spot trading activity and direction will be watched closely with traders to react quickly relative to strength or weakness. Although not directly related, the USDA's Quarterly Grain Stocks report, and the Prospective Plantings report will be the main reports watched by agricultural traders. USDA will release the February Agricultural Prices report Friday afternoon, providing average prices used in the calculation of income over feed. The average soybean meal price is not part of that report but is calculated from weekly prices by the FSA. Most often that is not released until the following day. We may not know income over feed used for the Dairy Margin Coverage program today. I expect there will be a payment as income over feed should be below $9.50.

CHEESE:

Cheese prices have declined significantly this week. It is unclear whether there will be further weakness today. Based on the activity Thursday during spot trading and unfilled bids remaining below the market, there could be further pressure. However, the needs of buyers and sellers change each day depending on order and whether they can buy or sell through regular channels in the country.

BUTTER:

Price is not expected to change much in the foreseeable future. Supply is meeting demand as well as rebuilding inventory. Ice cream production is utilizing more cream but sufficient supply remains, keeping plants operating on full schedules. Price is expected to remain choppy.




Thursday, March 30, 2023

Thursday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Class III Futures Again Defy Cheese Weakness

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 1 Higher
SOYBEANS: 2 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: $2.10 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $1.40 Higher
DOW JONES: 2 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 51 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $1.24 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined a penny, closing at $1.9250 with one load traded. Barrel cheese price declined 3 cents, closing at $1.8750 with no loads traded. There were an unfilled bid 10 cents below the block price and an unfilled bid for barrels 7.50 cents lower. Dry whey price slipped 0.25 cent, closing at 44 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures followed a similar pattern to Wednesday with most contracts trading 1 to 12 cents higher. Only April showed a decline of a penny. Butter price closed unchanged at $2.3975 with five loads traded. Price was on a roller coaster gaining 1.75 cents early and then falling back to unchanged then regaining 1.25 cents only to fall back during the conditional extension period of trading to unchanged. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained steady at $1.1475 with no loads traded. Class IV futures have not traded. Butter futures are 0.75 to 1.00 cents higher. Dry whey futures are 0.42 to 1.50 cents higher.




Fluid Milk and Cream - Western U.S. Report 13

In California, farm level milk output remains strong to steady in some parts of the state.     Farm level milk output is steady to lighter in areas up against regional challenges of     continued flooding and overflowing rivers. Contacts report further redistributing of cows to     drier dairies. Some stakeholders note increased production for March compared to last month     from preliminary reports, but also below forecasted levels for March thus far. Milk volumes     are available throughout the state for processing. In the Central Valley area, the flooding     caused reductions in processing capacity, creating challenges with balancing supply and     demand. Contacts report plant shutdowns and loss of power, along with transportation delays     as current flooding caused the need to use alternative routes. Spot load purchases and sales     at below Class prices continue being reported. Class I demand is lighter as educational     facilities go through their respective spring break schedules, while demand for all other     Classes remains steady. Despite additional increases in snowpack levels, reservoir storage     amounts, and precipitation amounts, the California Department of Water Resources also     indicates the number of dry wells reported year to date has increased to 123. 
In Arizona, farm level milk output is steady. Throughout the state milk volumes are available for bottling and other production needs. Stakeholders report some open processing capacity and filling it with loads brought in from out of state. Spot load purchases and sales at below Class prices remain reported from contacts. Demand for all Classes is steady. 
Farm level milk output in New Mexico is strong to steady. Cow comfort has improved with winter storm warnings leaving the state this week. Milk volumes are available throughout the state for processing. All Classes have steady demand. 
In the Pacific Northwest, farm level milk output is strong. Milk volumes for bottling and processing needs are plentiful. Class I demand is lighter as educational facilities throughout the Pacific Northwest cycle through regional spring breaks. Demand for all other Classes remains steady. 
In the mountain states of Idaho, Utah, and Colorado, farm level milk output is strong to steady. Colorado continued to have some temperatures down into the 20s and Idaho had winter storm warnings. Plentiful milk volumes are available throughout the area. Lighter demand for Class I remains, while all other Classes have steady demand. 
Contract sales of condensed skim milk are steady, while spot market activity continues to be lighter. Condensed skim milk availability is mixed. Some stakeholders report plenty of volume is available, while others report limited opportunities with regional flooding causing plant shutdowns, unplanned downtime at processing facilities and longer transportation times. Plenty of cream is available for production schedules to remain strong. Cream multiplies increased on the top end this week.



     Western U.S., F.O.B. Cream
     Price Range - All Classes; $/LB Butterfat:   2.3780 - 2.9012
     Multiples Range - All Classes:               1.0000 - 1.2200
     Price Range - Class II; $/LB Butterfat:      2.5920 - 2.9012
     Multiples Range - Class II:                  1.0900 - 1.2200


Thursday Morning Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Show Early Strength

OPENING CALLS:

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

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: Mixed
Soybean Futures: 1 to 3 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: Mixed
Wheat Futures: 1 to 3 Higher

MILK:

The action in Class III futures defied logic yesterday but higher futures do improve the outlook for milk prices. It is interesting to see higher bids than the closing prices Wednesday for contracts through July. The significant decline in spot cheese prices yesterday would normally have put substantial pressure on milk futures. However, the market did the opposite. One explanation could be that large traders knew selling would increase with the weakness. They purchased sufficient contracts to move the market higher in order to have sellers react by buying back out of their positions. This would move the market higher, allowing the larger spec traders to make a profit. This is just a theory as I have seen it happen before. All eyes will be on the spot market Thursday to see if buyers of cheese will step back into the market.

CHEESE:

Block cheese price fell 16.50 cents over the past two days, moving price back to the lowest level it had been since March 14. It is uncertain whether the price is low enough to bring buyers back into the market again. Business continues to be done out in the country. Buyers and sellers come to the spot market when they need to accomplish business outside of their usual channels.

BUTTER:

The strength of price over the past two days might be near the end again as buyers do not need to be aggressive as supply is sufficient for demand. Cream supply has tightened but not enough to impact churning activity with plants continuing to run on full schedules. Price is expected to remain rangebound.




Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Wednesday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Defy Underlying Cash

MILK

It is reported that milk production continues to slowly improve in much of the country with the Mid-Atlantic states nearing spring flush levels. Bottling demand has been steady with spring break just around the corner for most schools. Spring break may put more milk on the spot market, which could reduce prices even further. There is no shortage of milk anywhere, and it is not expected to tighten anytime soon. The outlook for higher milk prices on the futures market will keep culling lower and barns full. Class III milk futures showed incredible strength in the face of the decline of cheese prices. Only the April and May contracts closed lower with double-digit gains in numerous other contracts. After futures were settled for the day, continued trading showed further strength developing with even April and May contracts moving into positive territory. Trading volume was moderate, making the close more impressive.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.69
6 Month: $18.80
9 Month: $19.06
12 Month: $19.05

CHEESE

Cheese demand is mixed, varying across the country. Some ordering has increased from retail outlets. In general, manufacturing facilities have access to all the milk they need. Some cheese plants have increased their production schedules as more milk comes in from patrons. Cheese inventory has yet to increase but is anticipated to increase as spring progresses.

BUTTER

Cream is tightening from the lofty supply level it has been in for a time. Churns are showing no signs of slowing and continue to run on full schedules. Ice cream production is ramping up, which is reducing the amount of cream available on the spot market. No shortage of cream and/or tightness of butter supply is expected for quite a while.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn gained 3.25 cents, closing at $6.5050. May soybeans gained 9.50 cents, closing at $14.7725, with May soybean meal up $0.30, closing at $458.20 per ton. May wheat gained 5 cents, ending at $7.0475. April live cattle gained $0.87, closing at $165.82. May crude oil. The Dow gained 323 points, closing at 32,718, while the NASDAQ gained 210 points, ending at 11,926.




Wednesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Prices Fall

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 2 Higher
SOYBEANS: 9 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $0.10 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.72 Higher
DOW JONES: 264 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 174 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.20 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price fell 9.75 cents, closing at $1.9350 with no loads traded. A buyer did show up, placing a bid at $1.91 and did not want to raise that bid. This may be a reason Class III futures have not seen the pressure one would have anticipated with the large decline. Barrel cheese price declined 4.50 cents, closing at $1.9050 with one load traded. There were three uncovered offers remaining at the close. Dry whey slipped 0.25 cent, closing at 44.25 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures have not reacted much to the significant cash weakness with current prices ranging from 13 cents lower to 18 cents higher. Only the April and May contracts show negative prices. It is just another one of those mysteries when futures do not move in relation to underlying cash. Traders seem to be optimistic over a price rebound. Butter price increased 2.75 cents, closing at $2.3975 with six loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price slipped 0.25 cent, closing at $1.1475. However, this moves it to a new low and the lowest it has been since March 19, 2021. Class IV futures have not traded. Butter futures are 1.00-2.00 cents higher. Dry whey futures are steady to 0.20 cent lower. 




Wednesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Under Pressure Ahead of Cash

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: 4 to 8 Lower
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: 1 to 3 Higher
Soybean Futures: 2 to 4 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: Mixed
Wheat Futures: 10 to 14 Higher

MILK:

The pressure on Class III milk futures Tuesday came in response to lower cheese prices. The decline of nearby futures was generally in line with the decline of underlying cash, giving the impression traders may not think the market will rebound quickly. Prices may have moved too high, too fast with buyers of cheese now stepping back for a period. Milk production continues to provide sufficient supply for bottling and manufacturing. Plants are operating on full schedules as allowed by current employee staffing. Some plants have more production capacity but are limited to what can be accomplished due to labor. Milk futures may see selling pressure ahead of spot trading in anticipation of further weakness due to no buyers showing interest Tuesday, even at lower cheese prices.

CHEESE:

Buyers of fresh cheese may have been satisfied for the time being. Purchasing will continue out in the country, but they may not need to come to the spot market in the near term. Price may retrace as buyers may hold back, waiting for lower prices before stepping back in again.

BUTTER:

Price has been in a range since late last year and is expected to remain in a range for the foreseeable future. Supply and demand seem to be balanced with inventory growing. Price will not remain in the range indefinitely, but buyers and sellers are comfortable at the present time.




Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Tuesday Closing Dairy Market Update - South Dairy Trade Shows More Weakness in Uruguay

MILK

Class III milk futures took a hit Tuesday with April, May and June experiencing the greatest pressure. What is surprising is that April did not see as much pressure as May. April is still wide open for influence from underlying cash price movement. The contract is being priced but is in the early stage of it. More trading activity took place in the May contract. It is interesting that trading activity was not as heavy on the weakness Tuesday as it was when cheese prices were strengthening. South Dairy Trade prices were released Tuesday for dairy products moving through ports in Argentina and Uruguay over the two-week period. There were 11,566.57 tons of dairy products moving through ports in Argentina to 21 destinations at an average price of $4,030.75 per ton during the period of Feb 1-15. Whole milk powder price increased 0.8% from the previous report to $3,767.28 per ton or $1.71 per pound. Skim milk powder decreased 1.3% to $3,592.30 per ton or $1.63 per pound. Semi-hard cheese increased 1.8% to $4,625.70 per ton or $2.10 per pound. Hard cheese decreased 1.4% to $6,206.27 per ton or $2.82 per pound. Butter increased 2.7% to $4,828.00 per ton or $2.19 per pound. Buttermilk pounder increased 32.5% from the previous period to $2,650 per ton or $1.20 per pound. Dairy products moving through ports in Uruguay over the period March 1-15 totaled 6,539.64 tons to 23 destinations at an average price of $3,835.09 per ton. Whole milk powder decreased 2.5% to $3,610.95 per ton or $1.64 per pound. Skim milk powder decreased 6.6% to $3,513.10 or $1.60. Semi-hard cheese declined 1.3% to $4,836.17 per ton or $2.20 per pound. Hard cheese increased 3.8% to $6,360.44 per ton or $2.89 per pound. Butter decreased 1.3% to $5,305.28 per ton or $2.41 per pound.

Average Class III Prices

3 Month: $18.72
6 Month: $18.74
9 Month: $18.99
12 Month: $19.00

CHEESE

Traders seem to think there may be some limitation to the downward move of cheese prices due to most of the selling pressure is April through June contracts. This would coincide with the spring flush period. However, the weakness of prices Tuesday may keep buyers sidelined for a period as upward price movement may have gotten out of hand based on supply and demand. It is likely spot milk will see another week of discounts upward of $10 to class to stimulate manufacturer buying interest.

BUTTER

The strength of butter price was welcomed, as buyers were more aggressive. However, the inability of price to hold the highs during spot trading may suggest limited upside potential. Buyers and sellers are comfortable at the current price range.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn declined by a penny, closing at $6.4725. May soybeans jumped 25.50 cents, ending at $14.6775, with May soybean meal up $11.90 per ton, closing at $457.90. May wheat gained 1.75 cents, closing at $6.9975. April live cattle gained $0.05, ending at $164.95. May crude oil gained $0.39, closing at $73.20 per barrel. The Dow slipped 38 points, closing at 32,394, while the NASDAQ declined 53 points, closing at 11,716.




Tuesday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Prices Drop Back

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 1 Higher
SOYBEANS: 24 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $12.20 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.07 Higher
DOW JONES: 30 Points Lower
NASDAQ: 87 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $1.07 Higher

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price declined 6.75 cents, closing at $2.0325 with no loads traded. An uncovered offer remained on the board with no buyer interest. Barrel cheese price declined 1.25 cents, closing at $1.95 with no loads traded. There were uncovered offers for two loads at the close with no buyers showing up to the market. Dry whey price remained steady at 44.50 cents with no loads traded. Class III futures are 42 cents lower to 6 cents higher with the only gain being in September. The greatest pressure is in the May contract. Butter price increased 2.50 cents, closing at $2.37 with seven loads traded. Price initially increased to $2.3825 before selling eroded the gain. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained unchanged at $1.15 with no loads traded. Class IV futures are 5 cents lower. Butter futures are 0.42 cent lower to 1.75 cents higher. Dry whey futures are steady to 1.0 cents lower.




Tuesday Morning Dairy Market Update - Traders Find Little Direction

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: 4 to 6 Higher
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

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

MILK:

It was a surprise to see milk futures pressured after spot trading showed no price movement. Recently, steady prices resulted in futures strength. However, with the recent strong price gains, traders may think it has reached a threshold. The market has moved up quickly and may be ripe for a price retracement. The strength has improved the price outlook, which may limit increased culling as we move through the year. This may keep milk production higher as farms will maintain and even add cows.

CHEESE:

Steady cheese prices Monday with no trading activity were very unusual. There were two uncovered offers for barrels with no urgency to sell them. This leaves traders guessing if stronger prices may have run their course or if it was a pause in a higher trending market. There is some concern the higher prices may impact both domestic and international demand.

BUTTER:

It was not a surprise to see no activity in spot butter Monday. The market is balanced with sufficient supply available to buyers out in the country, reducing the need for them to come to the daily spot market. Although ice cream production is increasing, cream supply is sufficient to keep churns running on full schedules.




Monday, March 27, 2023

Monday Closing Dairy Market Update - Milk Futures Take a Breather

MILK

Class III futures were lower with some contracts showing double-digit losses. Steady cash prices triggered some profit taking on the concern prices may have reached a plateau. That will be seen over the next few days as traders assess continued demand at current prices. Milk production is holding and increasing as weather turns more spring-like. Spring flush is beginning to take place in some areas and will continue as the weeks progress. It is uncertain just how much milk output will increase over the next two months. We do know that we have more cow numbers than a year ago, which could keep milk production higher than last year. Class IV futures held mostly steady, as no direction was seen in underlying cash butter or nonfat dry milk.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.95
6 Month: $18.93
9 Month: $19.14
12 Month: $19.12

CHEESE

Fresh cheese has been in demand with buyers outbidding each other to obtain available supply before prices moved higher. At some point, buyers will have sufficient on hand and will not need to be as aggressive, or price will be too high, moving buyers to the sidelines. Cheese production has not been able to meet demand as well as increasing inventory. Many plants are running at the capacity of what their workforce will allow but not at the capacity of the plant. This keeps spot milk in plentiful supply and at a significant discount to class.

BUTTER

Price remains solidly in the range it has been in since late December. With current supply and demand, it is not expected to change much. Some contracting is being done for third-quarter needs, which may limit price potential moving through the second half of the year. Bulk butter continues to be manufactured and frozen for storage.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn gained 5.25 cents, closing at $6.4825. May soybeans gained 14 cents, ending at $14.42, with May soybean meal up $0.90 closing at $446. May wheat gained 9.50 cents, closing at $6.98. April live cattle increased $1.90, closing at $164.90. May crude oil jumped $3.55 per barrel, closing at $72.81. The Dow gained 195 points, closing at 32,432, while the NASDAQ declined 55 points, closing at 11,769.



Monday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Steady Cash Produces Weakness in Milk Futures

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 4 Higher
SOYBEANS: 15 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $1.450 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $1.60 Higher
DOW JONES: 246 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 36 Points Lower
CRUDE OIL: $3.13

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Both block and barrel cheese prices remained unchanged with no loads traded. Prices remained at $2.10 and $1.9625 respectively. Two uncovered offers for loads of barrel remained at the close. Dry whey price remained unchanged at 44.50 cents with no loads traded. Butter price was steady at $2.3450 with no loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk was unchanged at $1.15 with no loads traded. It is rare to see spot prices unchanged in all categories and rarer to see prices unchanged and no trading activity. Class III traders did not like the steady prices as they became more aggressive sellers. Class III futures are 19 cents lower to 2 cents higher with April posting the greatest loss. Class IV futures have only traded in the May contract, which is 10 cents higher. Butter futures are 0.75 cent lower to 1.25 cents higher. Dry whey futures are 0.50 cent lower to 0.15 cent higher.




Cheese exports set another record

Nerves were frayed this week over the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and New York’s Signature Bank, even as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation stepped in. The latest inflation indicator was only up 0.4% in February but 6% above a year ago as we await the Fed’s decision on further interest rate hikes. Torrential rains and snow were again hitting California, resulting in flash flooding in some areas, including dairy regions. Parts of New York saw heavy snowfall.

Tight dairy margins are fraying U.S. dairy producers and dairy cow culling remains strong in response. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s latest weekly data shows 66,879 head were sent to slaughter the week ending March 4, up 1,579 head from the previous week but 621 head less than a year ago. Year-to-date slaughter stood at 606,100 head, up 21,700, or 3.7%, from a year ago.

StoneX points out that dairy cows are taking up a greater percentage of the beef market share and blames tight dairy margins.

The USDA’s monthly Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook, issued March 14, mirrored milk price and production projections in the March 8 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report, but the Outlook also said milk cows are projected to average 9.390 million head in 2023, 10,000 head higher than last month’s forecast.

Cow numbers are expected to decline through the year, however, as lower numbers of replacement heifers and higher expected cull-cow prices will likely contribute on the decline of the dairy herd. The milk-per-cow projection was unchanged from last month at an average 24,345 pounds per head.

Dairy margins were mixed the first half of March, improving in some marketing periods while deteriorating in others, according to the latest Margin Watch from Chicago-based Commodity and Ingredient Hedging LLC.

“Class III milk futures prices recovered on strength in the cheese market, while soybean meal prices held steady and corn futures continued to sell off,” the MW said. “January dairy exports were solid, with 466.1 million pounds of product shipped during the month, up 13.2% from last year and a record for the month.

“Exports to Mexico were almost 50% higher than last year as strength in the peso relative to the U.S. dollar has increased purchasing power for Mexican consumers who are experiencing a stronger economy relative to other developing markets.

“Cheese exports totaled 75 million pounds, a record for the month and up 15.6% from last year. NDM exports of 150.4 million pounds were likewise up about 15% from last year and the second highest January NDM export total on record.

“January butter exports of 7.5 million pounds were down 3.7% from last year but still 2 million pounds larger than the five-year average. Exports to both Canada and Mexico who have a free trade agreement with the U.S. were solid although demand from Asian and Middle Eastern markets was weaker, highlighting the fragile nature of the global economy at present. Demand will be a big focus for the market as milk output continues to expand relative to last year, particularly in central states as the spring flush begins.

“Excess milk has been cleared on the spot market for as much as $10 per hundredweight below the class price from December through February as surging milk production in the central region has overwhelmed processing capacity.”

Tuesday’s Global Dairy Trade Pulse saw 2.1 million pounds of Fonterra whole milk powder sold at $3,230 per metric ton, down 0.6% or $18 from last week’s GDT.

HighGround Dairy said, “The slight decline on the WMP price from the previous GDT auction reaffirms the bearish market sentiment as milk supplies begin to grow in the Northern Hemisphere while global demand remains lackluster.”

Meanwhile, the U.S. Dairy Export Council states on its website that it yearly “summarizes key ‘signposts’ that our analysts will be watching in the year ahead that will determine the direction of U.S. dairy exports and global markets.”

This year, they will focus on the major structural factors that will come into play, including the so-called economic headwinds, namely inflation and consumer purchasing power.
China’s import demand, when and if it returns, was No. 2, followed by usage of dairy alternatives like palm oil and plant-based imitators. EU27 and U.K. milk production will be watched, according to the USDEC, as will farm input costs and availability here at home. Last but not least, inventories will be closely watched. USDEC concluded that they “expect hand-to-mouth buying to be common, likely making markets and import demand more volatile in the year ahead.”

Cash cheese prices in Chicago converged and strengthened this week, driven by demand, according to Matt Gould, editor of “The Weekly Wire” in the March 20 “Dairy Radio Now” broadcast.

Domestic demand has been “so-so at best since December,” Gould said. He blamed consistently negative retail cheese sales, which means more dependence on food service and exports. Price inflation is clearly seen at any McDonald’s or Burger King, he said, “so that leaves exports for any hope of optimism.”

Recent price declines have resulted in some short-term export bookings, he said; however, “the international marketplace continues to be a place with headwinds.”

“European cheese prices, particularly for mozzarella, which tends to go into the international food service market, and Gouda, are well below U.S. prices, so our ability to even maintain market share this year is going to be a challenge,” Gould said.

“This is not going to be an explosive price year for dairy farmers,” Gould said, and the West is seeing the most auction notices. California is one of the states and is also being inundated by water. New Mexico, and to a lesser degree, Texas, are also seeing an uptick in exits, according to Gould, who expects that to continue for the next several months.

The USDA supplied January dairy supply and utilization data this week. Starting with cheese, total utilization amounted to 1.198 billion pounds, up 0.7% from January 2022. Domestic use, at 1.123 billion pounds, was down 0.2%, while exports, at 75 million, were up 15.6%, an all-time high for January.

Butter saw further weakness, at 156.4 million pounds, down 13.2%, lowest volume since July 2020, according to HGD, which blamed poor domestic consumption, down 13.6% from a year ago, while exports were down 3.8%.

Total nonfat dry milk utilization dropped to 199.1 million pounds, down 3.8%, with domestic demand falling to 48.7 million, down 35.8%, lowest January reading since 2020. Exports climbed to 150.4 million, up 14.8% from a year ago, highest January level since 2020, according to HGD.

Dry whey totaled 81 million pounds, up 0.1% from a year ago. Domestic use fell to 52 million pounds, down 4.1%, and exports, at 29 million, were up 8.6%.

Dairy markets didn’t have a lot to feed on this week in the way of USDA reports. Next week will have plenty, with the February milk production report, February slaughter report and February cold storage data.

After losing 17 cents the previous week, CME cheddar block cheese reflected some green this week, closing St. Patrick’s Day at $1.9975 per pound, up 21.75 cents on the week, but 13.25 cents below a year ago.

The barrels, after jumping 19.50 cents the previous week, added another 19 cents this week, closing Friday at $1.96, 7 cents below a year ago, and a more typical 3.75 cents below the blocks. There were 13 sales of block on the week at the CME and 36 of barrel, down from 50 loads of barrel the previous week.

Cheese market tones experienced a bullish push this week as prices climbed both for blocks and barrels, said Dairy Market News. “Markets are also under a more assured tone as the block to barrel price difference narrowed noticeably,” DMN said. Cheesemakers in the Midwest say demand is hearty. Barrel makers relay more committed customers, while some retail cheddar and Italian style cheese processors say they are concerned about lacking the production capacity to bolster summer/fall inventories, despite readily available milk. Spot milk prices met the $10 under Class III mark again this week, as milk handlers continue to offer spot loads exclusively below Class III, according to DMN.

Looking west, varietal cheese demand from retail and food service purchasers is strong to steady. Second quarter bookings continue steadily, as some contacts report close to sold out inventories. Spot loads are available and overall spot demand is steady. Barrel sales are heavily active, while block sales are light. Barrel inventories remain more abundant than block inventories, despite the strong week for the barrel market. Export demand continues mixed. Some report strong to steady demand from Asian and Mexican markets, while others report current prices are uncompetitive with European and global pricing. Milk volumes are regionally plentiful to ample for cheesemakers to keep strong production schedules going, DMN said.
Cash butter jumped 4.75 cents Monday, added 2 cents Thursday and closed Friday at $2.40 per pound, up 6.75 cents on the week, reversing two successive weeks of decline, but was 32.50 cents below a year ago. There were six sales reported for the week.

Butter demand has strengthened due, at least in part, to the upcoming spring holidays, according to DMN. Cream availability, despite similar multiples week to week, has begun to tighten when compared to just a few weeks ago. That said, cream remains generally available for active churning, but demand from other end users, namely cream cheese and ice cream manufacturers, has butter plants reporting that offers have begun to subside. Butter market tones are uncertain, with views from range-bound to more bearish potential due to the available cream and churning activity of recent months.

Cream continues to be plentiful in the West, but balanced to ample. Cream demand is steady to light. Some contacts note strong to steady production, while others note steady to lighter output and decreased processing capacity with equipment repairs taking place. Retail demand is light, and some report a light start for the spring holiday season. Export demand is steady, although some report current domestic prices are taking away U.S. competitiveness.
Grade A nonfat dry milk closed Friday at $1.1875 per pound, up 1.25 cents on the week but 67.25 cents below a year ago, with five sales on the week.

Dry whey saw some ups and downs this week but finished Friday at 46.75 cents per pound, 2.50 cents higher, but 29.25 cents below a year ago, with three sales on the board for the week at the CME.

March 16 Class III futures settlements had the March price at $18 per hundredweight. April was at $18.60; May, $18.31; June, $18.53; July, $18.97; and August at $19.46. The peak was at $19.76 in October, spelling plenty of red ink on U.S. dairy farms across the country.

National milk production is mixed, according to the USDA’s weekly update. Winter weather in the Mid-Atlantic and southernmost states of the Northeast has been mild, and farm level milk output is nearing spring flush volumes. Southeast milk output is steady and increasing week over week in the central states.

Some bottling orders have paused due to the upcoming spring break weeks for schools. Spot milk loads were moving as low as $12 under Class III. Farm level milk output is steady to lighter in Arizona and steady in New Mexico. Output is steady in the Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Colorado, and steady to strong in California and Utah, according to the USDA.




Monday Morning Dairy Market Update - Further Strength in Overnight Trade

OPENING CALLS:

Class III Milk Futures: 4 to 8 Higher
Class IV Milk Futures: Mixed
Butter Futures: Mixed

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: Steady to 3 Lower
Soybean Futures: 3 to 5 Higher
Soybean Meal Futures: Steady to $1 Higher
Wheat Futures: 4 to 6 Lower

MILK:

The market moved through the reports last week without seeing pressure on Class III futures, but the same cannot be said for Class IV futures. Class IV contracts have been under pressure as the weakness of butter and nonfat dry milk dimmed the price outlook. On the other hand, Class III futures pushed higher due to the strength of block cheese as barrel cheese only gained 0.25 cent last week. The fact that inventory did not increase in February provides some support under the market. Class III milk futures have increased substantially over the past three weeks with April gaining about $2.50 and back to the highest level since December. Some caution may be exercised as the market nearly always tends to fall faster than it increases, but that remains to be seen.

CHEESE:

Cheese prices have been rising as buyers turned more aggressive. The inventory of cheese is large, but the demand is for fresh cheese and that is what is driving prices higher. Demand needs to be met and inventory needs to be replenished, leaving buyers looking for more and coming to the spot market. Buyers may remain aggressive Monday.

BUTTER:

Growing inventory and sufficient production to meet demand keeps pressure on the market. Maybe a better assessment may be that it will limit upside potential. Churning is active, but cream supply tightened due to greater demand from increasing ice cream manufacturing. The market seems to be in balance at present




Friday, March 24, 2023

Friday Closing Dairy Market Update - Class III Futures Higher With Class IV Futures Lower for the Week

MILK

It has been another strong week for Class III futures with April pushing above $20.00 and June pushing above $19.00 at one point. These contracts did not hold those levels but did close with double-digit gains. The milk production report this week was somewhat bearish while the cold storage report was somewhat bullish. Traders favored the bullish side due to the aggressive buyer interest of underlying cash cheese. Some manufacturers indicate they are challenged to keep up with demand as orders have improved. This is surprising due to the fact that spot milk continues to be sold at a substantial discount to class. However, this is not so much due to strong demand, but rather the impact of a reduced workforce. Many plants continue to indicate they are making cheese at the capacity of their current workforce rather than at plant capacity. That is why spot milk has remained as low as $10.00 or as much as $12.00 below class since the end of last year. This also explains why cheese inventory is not increasing seasonally. It is not that demand is balanced or higher than supply. It is that cheese production has been limited relative to milk supply. It will be interesting to see how this will further impact the market.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $19.05
6 Month: $19.04
9 Month: $19.23
12 Month: $19.19

CHEESE

For the week, blocks increased 10.25 cents with 14 loads traded. Barrels only increased 0.25 cent with 19 loads traded. There was volatility in barrels but price showed weakness earlier in the week. Dry whey price declined 1.50 cents with five loads traded. Block price is at the highest level it has been since January 11. Barrels are at the highest level since November 17, 2022. Buyers have been trying to outbid each other to gain ownership of product.

BUTTER

Price has not been following the same pattern as cheese. Butter only holds a 14.50 cents premium to butter and is the closest it has been since early in the year. For the week, butter declined 5.50 cents with 11 loads traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk declined 3.75 cents with three loads traded. This has put pressure on Class IV futures with contracts closing lower for the week.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn jumped 11.25 cents closing at $6.43. May soybeans gained 8.75 cents closing at $14.2825 with may soybean meal up $6.80 closing at $445.10 per ton. May wheat gained 26.50 cents closing at $6.8850. April live cattle gained $0.85 ending at $163.00. May cure oil declined $0.70 closing at $69.26 per barrel. The Dow gained 132 points closing at 32,238 while the Nasdaq gained 37 points closing at 11,824.




Friday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Cheese Shows Further Strength

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 9 Higher
SOYBEANS: 7 Higher
SOYBEAN MEAL: $14.40 Higher
LIVE CATTLE: $0.95 Higher
DOW JONES: 75 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 117 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.73 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese price increased 4.50 cents, closing at $2.10 with three loads traded. Barrel cheese gained 0.25 cent, closing at $1.9625 with two loads traded. Barrel price initially declined to $1.94 before a buyer bid price back up to close higher. Dry whey price increased 0.75 cent, closing at 44.50 cents with four loads traded. Class III futures are unchanged to 25 cents higher with September and November showing the greatest gain. Butter price slipped 0.25 cent, closing at $2.3450 with one load traded. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained unchanged at $1.15 with no loads traded. Class III futures have only traded in the November contract, steady with Thursday. Butter futures are 0.27 to 0.60 cent higher. Dry whey futures are steady to 0.30 cent lower.




Friday Morning Dairy Market Update - Spot Trading Will Be Focus

OPENING CALLS:

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

OUTSIDE MARKET OPENING CALLS:

Corn Futures: Mixed
Soybean Futures: 6 to 10 Lower
Soybean Meal Futures: $3 to $4 Lower
Wheat Futures: 12 to 14 Lower

MILK:

Traders now have the Milk Production, Cold Storage, and Livestock Slaughter report numbers to assess and determine the impact these will have on the market. Cheese prices may have risen too far, too fast; but until buyer interest slows, further gains may be possible. April futures neared $20.00 Thursday but fell short and are currently seeing some pressure. Dairy cattle slaughter in February indicates farms are not culling cows to any great extent, which will keep milk production strong for the time being. Demand for cheese is holding well as more milk being available for manufacturing is still not able to rebuild inventory above year earlier levels. It seems the problem may lie with a lower workforce reducing the ability of plants to increase production. That may be a reason spot milk prices have been so low for so long. Milk is available with plants not able to handle it. If so, this may be a greater problem as we move through spring flush.

CHEESE:

The inability of cheese inventory to grow in February indicates demand remains good with buyers turning to the spot market to get what they need to fill fresh cheese demand. Cheese inventory remains large but there has not been seasonal growth, which influences the market. The recent strong price increase has not yet reached the threshold of buyers.

BUTTER:

With growing butter inventory, buyers are not concerned over supply. More demand for cream is coming from ice cream manufacturers as they gear up for the summer. However, cream supply remains sufficient to keep churning active. Price is expected to remain within a range.




Thursday, March 23, 2023

Thursday Closing Dairy Market Update - Butter Inventory Gains While Cheese Inventory Declines


MILK

Class III milk futures were higher again today in response to the increase of cheese prices. Class IV futures were lower in response to the weakness of butter price. April Class III futures moved within 10 cents of reaching $20.00 today, a place where it has not been since December 7, 2022. The market has turned quickly even though there has not been a significant change of fundamentals. The outlook for milk prices has improved immensely over the past 2 1/2 weeks for nearby months primarily. A better outlook for milk prices will ensure continued strong milk output. USDA released the February Livestock Slaughter report today. The report contains the number of dairy cattle slaughtered during the month. Slaughter totaled 266,500 head with was identical to the number slaughtered in February 2022. This was 31,400 head less than in January. Some of the decline was understandable as February had three fewer days than January. However, it was a substantial decline even taking that into consideration which supports the increase of 12,000 cows in February according to the milk production report.

AVERAGE CLASS III PRICES

3 Month: $18.94
6 Month: $18.91
9 Month: $19.08
12 Month: $19.06

CHEESE

USDA released the February Cold Storage report today which showed overall cheese inventory down from January and lower than a year ago. American cheese inventory declined 6.4 million pounds totaling 816.9 million pounds for the month. This is 2% below a year ago. Swiss cheese inventory increased 534,000 pounds to 23,9 million pounds, down 5% from a year ago. Other cheese inventory increased 5.7 million pounds totaling 605.5 million pounds, down 1% from a year ago. Total cheese inventory reached 1.446 billion pounds, down 1% from February 2022. It is unusual to see cheese inventory decrease during the month of February.

BUTTER

Price has shown more weakness than anticipated this week. It is not expected to fall apart but indicates buyers are not concerned about supply. February inventory increased 30.7 million pounds from January moving total stocks to 295,000 pounds. This is 12% higher than they were for February 2022 and the highest inventory since July 2022.

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY

May corn declined 1.75 cents ending at $6.3175. May soybeans fell 29 cents ending at $14.1950 with May soybean meal down $13.30 closing at $438.30 per ton. May wheat slipped 1.50 cents closing at $6.62. April live cattle declined $0.15 ending at $162.15. May crude oil declined $0.94 closing at $69.96 per barrel. The Dow gained 75 points closing at 32,105 while the Nasdaq gained 117 points closing at 11,787.



Thursday Midday Dairy Market Summary - Block Cheese Prices Stronger

OUTSIDE MARKETS SUMMARY:

CORN: 2 Lower
SOYBEANS: 26 Lower
SOYBEAN MEAL: $10.80 Lower
LIVE CATTLE: $0.10 Lower
DOW JONES: 166 Points Higher
NASDAQ: 174 Points Higher
CRUDE OIL: $0.71 Lower

MIDDAY MARKET UPDATE:

Block cheese prices showed strength throughout the spot trading period, gaining 4 cents with price closing at $2.0550 with three loads traded. This is the highest price since Jan. 18. Barrel cheese price initially declined 1.50 cents before buying interest increased, moving price to $1.96, up 2 cents on the day with seven loads traded. Dry whey price declined a penny, closing at 43.75 with no loads traded. Class III futures jumped higher with contracts ranging from 3 cents lower to 50 cents higher. April shows the greatest gain with the only loss in the December 2023 contract. Butter price declined 3.50 cents, closing at $2.3475 with one load traded. This moves the price back to the level it was at two weeks ago. Grade A nonfat dry milk price remained unchanged at $1.15 with no loads traded. Class IV futures have only traded in the August contract, which is 5 cents lower. Butter futures are steady to 2.00 cents lower. Dry whey futures are steady to 0.50 cent lower. USDA will release the February Cold Storage and the Livestock Slaughter reports Thursday afternoon



Fluid Milk and Cream - Western U.S. Report 12

In California, farm level milk output is strong to steady in some parts of the state. In     areas facing the regional challenges of flooding and overflowing rivers, farm level milk     output is steady to lighter. Industry sources report some relocating of cows to drier     dairies, causing decreased milkings per day. Throughout the state milk volumes are available     for processing. Processing capacity has remained tightened in some areas with some regional     flooding causing more transportation delays and unplanned downtime at processing facilities.     Spot load purchases and sales at below Class prices remain noted by contacts. Class I demand     remains lighter, while demand for all Classes remains steady. Some stakeholders note concern     that if the heavy snowpack melts too rapidly there will be much heavier flooding in the     weeks to come. According to the California Department of Water Resources, as of March 21,     2023, snowpack levels for Water Year 2022-23 are 227 percent of normal to date compared to     historical averages. According to the California Department of Water Resources, as of March     21, 2023, the state has gotten 27.68 inches of precipitation for the current 2022-23 Water     Year, up 8.99 inches from the historical average. According to the California Department of     Water Resources, as of March 21, the estimated total reservoir storage was 26.90 million     acre feet, which is 107 percent of the historical average for the month. Despite these above     historical average levels, the California Department of Water Resources indicates 114 dry     wells have been reported year to date. 
Farm level milk output is steady in Arizona. Milk volumes are available throughout the state for bottling and other production needs. Some stakeholders report open capacity at plants and bringing in out of state milk to fill it. Contacts note spot load purchases and sales at below Class prices. Demand for all Classes is steady. 
In New Mexico, farm level milk output is steady. Temperatures went down to the 30s and the state had some winter storm warnings this week. Throughout the state milk volumes are available for processing. All Classes have steady demand. 
Farm level milk output in the Pacific Northwest is strong. However, stakeholders report production was down slightly from previous weeks. Ample milk volumes remain available throughout the area for bottling and other production facilities. Demand for Class I is lighter with approaching spring breaks for educational facilities. Demand for all other Classes remains steady. 
In the mountain state of Idaho, farm level milk output is strong. In Utah and Colorado farm level milk output is steady. Temperatures went down to the 20s in Colorado and Utah had winter storm warnings. Throughout the area milk volumes are available for processing. Demand for Class I remains lighter, while demand for all other Classes remain steady. 
Condensed skim milk demand is steady. Contract sales continue to be steady, while spot market activity is lighter. Availability of condensed skim milk is mixed. Some stakeholders report plentiful to balanced volumes, while others report tighter volumes with regional flooding causing unplanned downtime at processing facilities. Production schedules are strong with plenty of cream available. Cream multiplies slid down on the top end this week.

     Western U.S., F.O.B. Cream
     Price Range - All Classes; $/LB Butterfat:   2.3880 - 2.8895
     Multiples Range - All Classes:               1.0000 - 1.2100
     Price Range - Class II; $/LB Butterfat:      2.6029 - 2.8895
     Multiples Range - Class II:                  1.0900 - 1.2100



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 ...