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Conditions now right for recovery in global dairy prices

Published: Mon 4 Apr 2016 04:26 PM
Conditions now right for recovery in global dairy prices, ASB economist Penny says
By Fiona Rotherham
April 4 (BusinessDesk) - Global dairy prices will recover this year as growth in European production has now slowed, says ASB rural economist Nathan Penny.
His comments follow a Fitch Ratings report last week that forecast the modest supply response so far to low global dairy prices would prolong a recovery in prices beyond 2016.
Last month, when announcing Fonterra Cooperative Group's half-year results, chairman John Wilson said the company and most of its global dairy peers were struggling to make predictions on the direction of global dairy prices but the imbalance in supply and demand could correct itself in the next six months.
Penney shares Wilson’s more upbeat view, saying seasonally-adjusted production data shows EU farmers, like their Kiwi counterparts, are starting to feel the pinch.
“It follows that global prices are likely to recover this year as EU production growth slows further,” he said. “In particular, with NZ production likely to fall and Chinese demand improving, the conditions for the dairy price cycle turning are falling into place.”
Average prices on the GlobalDairyTrade auction fell by around 38 percent in 2014/2015 and around 20 percent in the 2015/2016 to mid-March.
Penney said seasonally adjusted production data shows three things: Production was held back prior to the removal of annual quotas at the end of March 2015 as countries avoided paying penalties associated with producing above quota; after the April removal of quotas, production surged in the EU with April production rising over 3 percent on a month-by-month basis; however, that post-quota surge has now passed with production growth slowing, particularly since July, as farmers have struggled with low milk prices.
“In official EU data, this third point gets lost – as a result, annual comparisons overstate the recent trends in EU production growth,” Penney said.
For example, the EU Commission shows that April 2015 to January 2016 was 4 percent higher than the same period a year earlier but annualising seasonally-adjusted data over recent months shows EU production is falling or at best flat.
“Moreover, with most dairy market buyers unaware of this data disconnect, we expect some to be caught short of supply later this year,” Penney said.
Once supply is more aligned to demand, global prices are expected to rise again.
Europe collectively is the world’s largest dairy exporter accounting for nearly a third of global export sales. EU exports increased by 6 percent in milk equivalent last year.
(BusinessDesk)

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