#Dairy prices to rebound – but maybe not until 2015

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Dairy prices have fallen below «sustainable» levels, but producers will have to wait until late this year for a recovery as Chinese importers, which has «bought far more than they needed», work their way through their stockpiles.
Rabobank said that the plunge in dairy prices, which have fallen by about one-quarter at GlobalDairyTrade since early February, was «more severe than anticipated» and has taken them below levels it «considers to be sustainable in the medium term».
In the European Union, for instance, the top cows’ milk producer, the dent to margins from lower milk payouts will slow year-on-year production growth to «just» 1% in the second half of 2014, down from 6.4% seen in the first four months of the year.
In New Zealand, the top milk exporting country, growth in the newly-started 2014-15 marketing year will slow to 2-3% «at best» from an estimated 10.5% last season.
Overall output growth in major exporting countries «will slow considerably», from 4.7% in the first half of the year to 1.8% in the second half.
‘Bought far more than they needed’
The slowdown has posed the question of «when, not if, prices move upwards again from here,» the bank said.
However, the answer appears to be that values may, potentially, not rise until next year, Rabobank said, cutting by up to $800 a tonne its forecasts for milk powder prices.
The bank forecast «little improvement in prices until late 2014-early 2015», reflecting the need for buyers to digest the recent stronger-than-expected milk supplies, with the extent of Chinese stockpiles a particular pressure on values.
«China bought more than we anticipated in the first five months of the year. It now appears they also bought far more than they needed.»
A 60% rise in imports in the January-to-May period, coupled with a slowdown in demand growth, fostered by price rises, and a «stabilisation» in domestic milk production «have left major Chinese buyers and traders with a significant inventory accumulation».
China milk production debate
Rabobank forecast that Chinese dairy production, hurt last year by poor weather and an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, was running at year-ago levels, and would show an increase in the second half of the year, although the rate of growth «will remain very modest».
However, some other observers are far more sanguine over milk production growth, with Agrimoney.com having heard some talk of rates running 6% higher than a year ago.
US Department of Agriculture staff in Beijing, in a report overnight, downgraded their estimate for Chinese cows’ milk production in 2014 to 36.0m tonnes, but this still represents an increase of 5.0% year on year.
Separately, industry data overnight showed Australian milk production running 8.2% higher last month than in May 2013.
That reduced to 0.2% the deficit for the full 2013-14 season, with one month to go.
 
Source: Agrimoney

Mirá También

Así lo expresó Domingo Possetto, secretario de la seccional Rafaela, quien además, afirmó que a los productores «habitualmente los ignoran los gobiernos». Además, reconoció la labor de los empresarios de las firmas locales y aseguró que están «esperanzados» con la negociación entre SanCor y Adecoagro.

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