By Gavin Evans
Jan. 16 (BusinessDesk) - A fourth straight increase in dairy auction prices has prompted Westpac to raise its price milk
price forecast for the current season.
The bank is picking a farm gate milk price of $6.30 per kilogram of milk solids, up from the $6.10 it had been picking
early December. The upgrade puts its forecast at the top end of the revised $6-$6.30 range Fonterra provided last month.
Average prices jumped 4.2 percent to US$3,057 a tonne at last night’s GlobalDairyTrade auction, with the key whole milk
powder price up 3 percent at US$2,777. The increases were higher than many economists had expected.
Westpac economist Anne Boniface said auction prices have now risen 7 percent during the past month and are up 11 percent
from the two-year low reached in November.
While the bank had long expected a reversal of the price decline seen in the first half of 2018, the pace and extent of
the improvement has been more rapid than it had expected.
She said the new forecast conservatively assumes auction prices remain near their current levels for the next few
months.
“There’s clearly the potential for prices to continue to improve further from here if the recent lift in demand is
maintained,” Boniface said in a note to clients. “However, we remain cautious about the potential for the pace of growth
in Chinese demand for dairy products to slow as growth in China more broadly cools, and the potential for New Zealand
milk production to continue to grow strongly.”
Dairy is New Zealand’s biggest export industry. China is the country’s largest trading partner and a major buyer of the
cheese, butter and milk powders made or sold by Fonterra, Synlait Milk, A2 Milk, Westland Milk Products, Yashili and
others.
Boniface said buying from China appears to have been unusually strong during the January auctions. That could in-part be
due to poor domestic production, and appears unusual given recent data, including weak car sales and weak exports, which
suggest growth in China is slowing sharply.
“At face value, the strong lift in the proportion of GlobalDairyTrade sales headed to the North Asian region - dominated
by China - in January seems at odds with this.”
Fonterra Shareholders’ Fund units were unchanged at $4.71. Synlait shares rose 1.6 percent to $9.50. A2 Milk rose 2.2
percent to $11.90.
The biggest gainer in last night’s auction was skim milk powder, where the average price jumped 10.3% to US$2,405 a
tonne.
Boniface said the increase was notable given volumes were 14 percent higher than the previous auction, when the usual
seasonal trend would be for volumes to be declining this time of year.
Rabobank research analyst Emma Higgins attributed the sharp price jump to strong demand for fresh product, slower
production growth in markets other than New Zealand, and the European Union almost clearing its SMP intervention
stockpiles.
The latest GDT skim milk powder price is the highest in almost two years, she said.
“Strong sales over the past two EU Commission tenders held in December 2018 and January 2019 effectively shifted 141k
tonnes of product,” she said.
“Buyers are looking to procure SMP while prices are still affordable.”
Higgins also noted the significant volumes of both whole and skim milk powder that China had imported during the last
couple of months of 2018.
“We think at this point in time, stock levels have been replenished in China for the time being. Continued good weather
across much of the country has seen feed reserves aplenty and milk production volumes still strong.”
(BusinessDesk)
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