Dairy product prices fall for fourth straight auction
By Margreet Dietz
April 4 (BusinessDesk) - Dairy product prices fell at the Global Dairy Trade auction, dragged lower by an unexpected
plunge in anhydrous milk fat.
The GDT price index slipped 0.6 percent from the previous auction two weeks ago. The average price was US$3,477 a tonne.
Some 17,222 tonnes of product was sold, down from 18,635 tonnes two weeks ago.
Whole milk powder rose 1.6 percent to US$3,278 a tonne.
“Fonterra did release its February milk production data yesterday, which showed its collections were down 4 percent year
on year,” Amy Castleton, AgriHQ dairy analyst, said in a note. “This likely provided support to whole milk powder
prices.”
At the latest GDT auction, anhydrous milk fat sank 7 percent to US$5,806 a tonne, while skim milk powder slid 1.8
percent to US$1,849 a tonne.
“Anhydrous milk fat was expected to hold relatively steady over the next few months, as demand has been steady and
supply is limited, especially from New Zealand,” Castleton said. “There was less AMF sold at this event than at the
previous event—though still 42 percent more than at the same event a year ago.”
“AMF prices are now at about the same level they were a year ago,” she added.
Meanwhile, rennet casein rallied 12.1 percent to US$5,668 a tonne, while butter climbed 4.1 percent to US$5,494 a tonne.
Cheddar rose 2.2 percent to US$3,679 a tonne, while lactose rose 1.1 percent to US$549 a tonne, and butter milk powder
added 1 percent to US$1,988 a tonne.
The New Zealand dollar last traded at 72.61 US cents as of 12.52pm in New York, compared with 72.13 US cents at the
previous close in Wellington.
There were 123 winning bidders out of 169 participating at the 16-round auction. The number of registered bidders rose
to 514, up from 513 at the previous auction.
(BusinessDesk)
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