1 / 24

Dr. Tommie L. Shepherd Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development

2010 Dairy Outlook. Dr. Tommie L. Shepherd Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development. It’s Been a Heck of a Ride!. NASS Survey. Class Prices. Class I Price. Class II Price. Class III Price. Class IV Price. $. 1.1299. Make Allowance = .165. NASS Cheese Price Survey. $.

Download Presentation

Dr. Tommie L. Shepherd Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2010 Dairy Outlook Dr. Tommie L. Shepherd Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development

  2. It’s Been a Heck of a Ride!

  3. NASS Survey Class Prices Class I Price Class II Price Class III Price Class IV Price

  4. $ 1.1299 Make Allowance = .165 NASS Cheese Price Survey

  5. $ .9649 Value of Protein in Cheese NASS Cheese Price Survey

  6. $ Yield .9649 Factor $9.35 x 9.3452 = Value of Protein on 100 lbs. of Milk

  7. The U.S. “Milk Bucket” Fluid Consumption

  8. What Were the Drivers of Milk Prices in 2009? • Milk Production (Supply) • Dairy Cow Numbers • Milk Per Cow

  9. A Very Brief History of Milk Production

  10. U.S. Cow Numbers 2005-2009

  11. Milk Per Cow 2005-2009

  12. What Were the Drivers of Milk Prices in 2009? • Milk Production (Supply) • Dairy Cow Numbers • Milk Per Cow • Milk Consumption (Demand) • Fluid Demand

  13. Fluid Milk Sales 2005-2009

  14. What Were the Drivers of Milk Prices in 2009? • Milk Production (Supply) • Dairy Cow Numbers • Milk Per Cow • Milk Consumption (Demand) • Fluid Demand • Commercial Disappearance Cheese +3.6% Butter -2.0% Milk Powder -13.0%

  15. What Will Drive Milk Prices in 2010? • The Good News • A Weaker USD Will Improve Exports • Feed Costs Will Decline • 171,000 Fewer Cows Will Decrease Production • The Bad News • Large Supply of Replacement Heifers • Recovering Production in NZ and Australia • EU Subsidies for Dairy Exports • Can’t Say For Sure • Temporary Increase in CCC Support Prices

  16. Temporary Price Support Increases Original Aug/Sep/Oct

  17. If The Markets Are Correct . . . .

  18. If The Markets Are Correct . . . .

  19. The Last Time Prices Were Near Support . . . .

  20. Watch for Falling Prices

  21. So If The Markets Are Correct . . . .

  22. We Should See Some Price Recovery

  23. A Few Trends Worth Noting The Southeast Continues to Loose Milk Production Production Increases in the Midwest and Northeast The West Has Lost Cows – But Not Necessarily Milk Production

  24. Got Questions?

More Related