On
the news they say this is because there is lots of milk on the
market. As if supply and demand was in operation! As if commodity
prices aren't collapsing across the board!
Anything to stop people
joining the dots
Prices have dropped by about 50 per cent since February. There goes John Key's "rockstar economy" just a month or so after the election!
Dairy
price index falls 3.1 percent
A
further drop in Fonterra's forecast milk payout looks inevitable
after milk powder prices fell again in the overnight global dairy
trade.
19 November, 2014
The
average price for dairy commodities traded in the auction fell by 3.1
percent to two $2,561, its lowest point since July 2009.
That
followed a drop of 0.3 percent two weeks ago.
The
key product, whole milk powder, fell by 5.1 percent and skim milk
powder by 5.7 percent.
Rennet
Casein prices took the biggest hit, dropping by more than 12 percent
.
However,
butter cheese and anhydrous milk fat prices lifted by five to six
percent.
Fonterra
was due to review its farmgate milk price next month.
It
was sitting at $5.30 per kg of milk solids, which most commentators
said was unsustainable with current global prices.
Agricultural
analyst AgriHQ, which runs its own dairy price index, had lowered its
farmgate milk price to $4.55 as a result of the overnight auction.
Agrifax
dairy analyst Susan Kilsby said the price drop was being driven by a
lot of milk being on the market.
"For
our dairy farmers sake that we really, really do hope that we have
reached a trough.
"Where
prices are today, and where the outlook is and based on current
exchange rates we see a milk price around $4.55, which is well-bellow
where Fonterra currently have theirs at $5.30."
Federated
Farmers Dairy Industry Group Chair Andrew Hoggard feared the latest
news might linger on.
"It
does put a lot of pressure on payouts, the hope was that we'd start
seeing lifts through and that if the price had got to a certain point
by February-March, then Fonterra could be more certain about the
$5.30 payouts, that now puts that at risk."
Prime
Minister John Key reassured farmers dairy prices would soon bottom
out and bounce back after what he said had been a fairly savage
reduction.
"My
view is it's going to bottom out pretty soon and start going back the
other way, I don't think it's based on hope it's fundamentally based
on what is a massive consumer demand."
Mr
Key said much of the demand was coming from China.
He
said an unusual combination of factors had led to the drop in prices,
including fantastic growing conditions around the world and a build
up of inventories in China
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