Strong production, tested demand send milk prices crashing
Strong global milk production and rebalancing of demand among key buyers has delivered one of the biggest drops in whole milk powder prices in recent years.
OPINION: After two tough years, farmers are finally seeing some light at the end of the tunnel.
Dairy prices are on the rebound, with the last four Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auctions recording healthy price rises. Whole milk powder prices have nudged above the US$3,000/tonne mark.
Fonterra responded by recently lifting its forecast Farmgate Milk Price range to $6.50 - $8/kgMS, with a new midpoint of $7.25/ kgMS, up 50 cents.
Last week, a Rabobank report delivered further good news; after extreme market volatility and record-high prices in recent years, global fertiliser prices are expected to settle in 2024.
While we are still some months away from 2024 – this year has been a much calmer year for the fertiliser market – and 2023 can be seen as a transition year, even with some remnants of all the market complications from 2022, according to Rabobank.
The bank’s models indicate a recovery in global fertiliser usage in 2023, up by around 3%, compared to the 7% drop in 2022. For 2024, the initial analysis suggests an increase in global fertiliser use of close to 5%.
However, the bank points out that local fertiliser prices are significantly lower than a year ago, but this would not necessarily lead to increased fertiliser usage across New Zealand farms over coming months.
Farm margins are incredibly tight across many New Zealand farming businesses due to lower commodity prices and ongoing elevated costs for other farm inputs – like fuel and feed – as well as higher interest costs.
DairyNZ recently updated the national breakeven forecast to $7.78/kgMS, an increase from $7.51kg/MS.
Many farmers may not be breaking even right now, but rising dairy prices and relief from expensive inputs like fertiliser hints that better days lie ahead.
Alliance has announced a series of capital raise roadshow event, starting on 29 September in Tuatapere, Southland.
State farmer Pāmu (Landcorp) has announced a new equity partnership in an effort to support pathways to farm ownership for livestock farm operators.
Following a recent overweight incursion that saw a Mid-Canterbury contractor cop a $12,150 fine, the rural contracting industry is calling time on what they consider to be outdated and unworkable regulations regarding weight and dimensions that they say are impeding their businesses.
Trade Minister Todd McClay says his officials plan to meet their US counterparts every month from now on to better understand how the 15% tariff issue there will play out, and try and get some certainty there for our exporters about the future.
Brett Wotton, an Eastern Bay of Plenty kiwifruit grower and harvest contractor, has won the 2025 Kiwifruit Innovation Award for his work to support lifting fruit quality across the industry.