Source: https://farmersweekly.co.nz/section/dairy/view/dairy-product-prices-rally-led-by-milk-powder

Dairy product prices rally, led by milk powder

Dairy product prices rose at the Global Dairy Trade auction, moving higher for the fifth consecutive time.
The GDT price index rallied 6.7% from the previous auction three weeks ago.
The average price was US$3265 a tonne, compared with US$3057 a tonne three weeks ago.
Some 23,326 tonnes of product was sold, down from 27,909 tonnes three weeks ago.
Whole milk powder jumped 8.4% to US$3027 a tonne.
Offer volumes for whole milk powder were down on the previous event, even though they were up 19% on the previous year, NZX dairy analyst Robert Gibson said in a note.
“Firm demand from Asian countries is likely to have helped to support prices,” according to Gibson.
At the latest GDT auction, rennet casein surged 10.9% to US$5596 a tonne, while anhydrous milk fat climbed 5.8% to US$5579 a tonne.
Butter rose 4.2% to US$4445 a tonne, while skim milk powder gained 3.9% to US$2534 a tonne.
“Skim milk powder offer volumes leading into this event were down on the previous event, but up on the previous year,” Gibson noted.
Cheddar added 1.4% to US$3565 a tonne, while lactose advanced 1.3% to US$1035 a tonne.
Bucking the trend, butter milk powder declined, sliding 3.1% to US$3158 a tonne.
The gain in rennet casein was “contrary to the decrease in value at the previous event and likely due to smaller volumes,” according to Gibson.
Meanwhile, the decline in buttermilk powder “could have been due to a lift in volumes at the event. With relatively smaller quantities of these commodities sold at the event, volume changes can have a bigger impact on prices.”
For sweet whey powder, no product was offered or sold, or no price was published for the last event, or on both of the two previous events.
The New Zealand dollar last traded at 68.32 US cents as of 1.42pm in New York, compared with 68.96 US cents at the previous close in Wellington.
There were 106 winning bidders out of 177 participating at the 15-round auction. The number of registered bidders was 529, up from 524 at the previous auction.
-BusinessDesk

Local cheese maker Rowan Cooke was devastated when he heard King Island Dairy would be shutting down.

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