With the usual level of disconnect and hopium. Nothing to get worried about - go back to sleep, or, even better, go shopping.
Key
dairy price plunges further
Key
dairy commodity whole milk powder took another hit in the latest
global dairy trade auction overnight, putting even more pressure on
Fonterra to reduce its forecast milk payout to farmers.
3
December, 2014
Whole
milk powder plunged by a further 7.1 percent to an average price of
$US2229 a tonne.
The
price of whole milk powder is a key factor in how much Fonterra pays
its farmers.
Photo: PHOTO
NZ
Prices
rose for all other products traded at last night's auction by a range
of 5 to 9 percent, leaving the overall price index 1.1 percent below
a fortnight ago. The index is now sitting at its lowest point since
August 2009.
The
latest auction follows a 5 percent drop in the whole milk powder
price a fortnight ago.
Whole
milk powder has the biggest influence on the price Fonterra pays its
farmers. New Zealand's biggest dairy company is due to review the
farmgate milk price next week.
It
is currently sitting at $5.30 a kilo of milk solids, which most
commentators say is unsustainable with global prices at their current
levels.
Fonterra
has previously said the whole milk powder price needs to rise to
about $US3500 by March if it is to maintain its forecast payout to
farmers.
Listen
to Hayley Moynihan on Morning Report ( 3 min 24 esc )
The
director of Dairy Research at Rabobank, Hayley Moynihan, told Morning
Report the drop will put further pressure on payouts from
all dairy companies.
"As
we are now half way through the selling season for exporting
companies it does mean the chances of lifting that seasonal average
to support current milk price forecasts becomes less and less
likely."
Ms
Moynihan said cheaper milk for consumers was unlikely to be a
spin-off from the continued fall, as prices in the shops did not rise
much when farmgate prices were high and any reduction now would be
modest.
Federated
Farmers dairy chair Andrew Hoggard says farmers will feel the pinch -
but probably not until next year.
"Right
now most of us would have received the final payout from the record
season we've just had so all our bank balances will be looking fairly
healthy. It's this time next year where the cashflow hit is really
going to impact on farms."
Listen
to Andrew Hoggard on Morning Report ( 4 min 13 esc )
Rural
economists have previously warned a payout to farmers below $5 per
kilo of milk solids could knock nearly $6 billion from the New
Zealand economy.
Fonterra price drop 'inevitable'
AgriHQ
dairy analyst Susan Kilsby believed it was inevitable that Fonterra
would lower its forecast milk payout to farmers and the extent of the
latest drop in the whole milk powder price was a surprise.
"The
factor that drives whole milk powder more so than other commodities
is that New Zealand supplies so much of the powder that's traded
globally and China is the biggest buyer, so it's usually one or other
side of that market that impacts the whole milk powder price.
"At
the moment we are seeing this continued weak buying out of China,
although their own milk production is at its seasonal low now and
there are indications that that (demand) should improve, but it
doesn't seem to be playing out in the GDT auction yet.
"And
of course there's been pretty strong milk production out of New
Zealand. Just yesterday, official data for October milk production
was released which showed production was up by more than 5 percent
that month, so that's a huge amount of extra milk coming out at the
peak of our season."
Ms
Kilsby said AgriHQ, which calculates its own seasonal milk price, has
lowered that to $4.25 as a result of the latest auction.
"We're
a full dollar lower than where Fonterra's sitting at the moment, so
we're definitely expecting a downwards revision in their forecast
when that's revised next week. I would say we'd need to see a
reasonably significant reduction to bring it down anywhere near the
level where we see it being.
"But
also the futures market has come back. We pretty much saw a 20
percent drop in pricing for futures contracts from now through to
July 2015, so it's looking like that recovery is going to take a long
time - or that's what the markets are saying at the moment that it's
not going to happen in a hurry."
BNZ
economist Doug Steel meanwhile believes whole milk powder prices will
remain weak for now, but could rise next year.
"We
thought there was going to be a little bit more weakness at this
auction and that's what we got, at least in the headline numbers ...
driven entirely by that whole milk powder, with every other product
posting quite solid gains.
"Even
within the whole milk powder pricing, if you look through the detail
of the contracts, prices in the near-term are quite weak. Prices that
are being negotiated out into the middle of next year are a lot
stronger," Mr Steel said.
NZ
dollar falls as oil price volatility unsettles markets
The
New Zealand dollar is slightly weaker from its opening this morning,
as oil price volatility unsettles global financial markets..
2
December, 2014
Brent crude fell to
five-year lows of near $US67.50 a barrel, overnight.
Rankin Treasury Advisory
director Derek Rankin said the kiwi had taken its lead from the
Australian dollar, which was particularly vulnerable to the fall in
oil prices.
He said the Reserve Bank
of Australia is meeting but not expected to do anything on interest
rates, but the next Fonterra dairy auction takes place overnight.
"Both the New
Zealand dollar and the Australian dollars are reasonably firm at the
moment and of course the US dollar itself is still reacting to the
news around the oil prices."
At about 5pm, the New
Zealand dollar was trading at 78.78 US cents, 92.51 Australian, 50.07
British pence, 0.6319 euro, 93.25 yen and 4.84 renminbi.
NZ shares little changed
New Zealand shares were
little changed today. The benchmark Top 50 Index rose 4 points to
5430.
Hamilton, Hinden director
Green, Grant Williamson said the local market did not follow Wall
Street's weaker lead with the New Zealand market relatively flat
today.
However, he said the
Chorus share prices was up significantly after the Commerce
Commission announcement of their draft determination regarding
wholesale charges, but it will see Spark's input costs increase.
Chorus shares climbed
37-cents to $2.51, while Spark's price fell 9.5 cents to $3.02.
Fisher & Paykel
Healthcare rose 15 cents to $5.70.
Fletcher Building was
down 15 cents to $8.05.
While Contact Energy rose
15 cents to $6.28 and Mighty River rose 7 cents to $3.03
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