Dairy commodity prices in the EU remain firm after the spring milk flush, while weaker demand for dairy ingredients in China due to the strict COVID lockdowns has softened Oceania milk powder and fat prices.

Supply-side constraints will remain a fixture in the outlook for at least the next half year as the effects of the Ukraine war will continue to drive high input costs (corn, grain and fertilizer). Milk prices continue to rise in Europe which will alleviate some of the pressure. Energy prices have receded in several regions as countries comply with Russia’s requirements to improve supplies but remain at extremes in others.

The weather outlook is not offering many prospects to improve milk supply, as Europe (already basking in a record hot spring) is forecast to have another warmer, drier summer, while the damage to pastures due to the poor finish to the NZ season may weaken the start of season in some key regions.

The constraints on EU milk output will keep protein and fat fundamentals firm, while the risk of weaker demand as buyers recoil from high prices is not expected to materially weaken commodity balance sheets. Higher food (and dairy) prices are reaching consumers but the potential damage to demand for dairy will be greater in butterfat rather than cheese.

The fundamentals also suggest a tighter US dairy market; milk output is constrained by weaker margins, sluggish recovery in the dairy herd and processor supply management, but there are mounting fears of softer cheese demand as households adjust to rising inflation. Lower milk availability for class IV uses in some regions will maintain protein and fat prices.

China’s zero-COVID restrictions will ease in coming weeks but a gradual return to normal mobility will take months. Damage to consumer spending (and confidence) and loaded supply chains will weaken short-term demand for imports.

With reduced exportable product, demand will inevitably be rationed in price-sensitive markets as consumers face rising food inflation.

June 2022 Graph Top 5 Milk

 

By Edwin Lloyd, Executive General Manager – Foods

Ph: +61 7 3246 7810

edwin@maxumfoods.com

Graph Reference: Fresh Agenda

For more information or interviews contact: Edwin Lloyd | Executive General Manager – Foods

Maxum Foods

Maxum Foods is one of Australia and New Zealand’s principal suppliers of dairy ingredients to the Human Health and Nutrition, as well as the Animal Nutrition industries. Maxum Foods specialises in supplying medium to large-scale food manufacturers with high-quality dairy ingredients such as milk powders, cheese and butter. Backed by top-level technical support and a huge dairy ingredient range, Maxum Foods have open global supply channels to source exactly what our customers need.

The price for the butter so essential to the pastries has shot up in recent months, by 25% since September alone, Delmontel says.

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