A' il6-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 25,2001 Markets Courtesy of Chicago Board and Mercantile Exchange Closing Bids: Thursday, August 23,2001 Soybean Meal Weekly Dairy Market Outlook Ken Bailey Penn State Aug. 17,2001 Butter Prices Keep Rising • Grade AA butter reaches Office Closed Labor Day On Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 3, Lancaster Farming office is closed. The office will reopen Tuesday, Sept. 4. For the Sept. 8 issue, there are some deadline changes: Public Sale and Mailbox ads, 5 p.m., Friday, Aug. 31. Classified, Section D ads 5 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 5. Classified, Section C, Farm Equipment ads, 9 a.m., Wednes day, Sept. S. General News noon, Thursday, Sept. 6. GRAIN. CATTLE. HOG &MILKBFP FUTURES MARKETS $2.09, • Cheese prices steady. • July milk production down 1.2 percent. • Dairy stocks a surprise! It was a busy week for report ing! The milk production and cold storage reports were re leased. The results are mixed and paint a picture of a market searching for direction. At the moment, that direction is for higher prices. However, the data also had a few surprises. First, let’s review the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Block cheese prices remained steady at $1.72 per pound. Barrels, how ever, declined from $1.65 per pound on Monday, Aug. 13, to $1.63 by Friday, Aug. 17. One shouldn’t read too much into that. It could be that the market was a bit long on barrels this week. Butter prices at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange offered a surprise. Grade AA butter rose from $2.05 per pound on Monday to $2.09 by Friday. The cheese and butter prices are odd when one compares them to USDA’s Cold Storage report re leased last week. Butter stocks at the end of July were 145.4 million pounds, up 6.2 percent over a year ago. Butter produc tion through June of this year was down over 8 percent relative to a year ago. What’s going on here? Well, the combination of fewer cows, reduced production per cow, and summer heat has made but terfat scarce. That has raised both wholesale and retail butter prices. That in turn has lowered the consumption of butter, thus raising stocks. The bigger question is whether butter stocks are going to continue to grow because of reduced retail consumption. If they do, and milk production re bounds just a bit, look for butter prices to take a nose-dive some time this fall. USDA’s Cold Storage report had just the opposite message 'for cheese. Stocks of American cheese at the end of July were down 19.7 percent. Total cheese stocks were down 16.9 percent. Lean Hogs Daily Prices As ofThursday, 23 August Date Oct 01 5862 5900 5825 5875 Dec 01 5430 5492 5412 5485 Feb 02 5605 5650 5585 5620 Apr 02 5710 5780 5680 5770 May 02 6245 6290 6225 6290 Jun 02 6550 6572 6525 6572 Jul 02 6280 6315 6230 6315 Aug 02 6000 6050 6000 6050 Oct 02 5500 5520 5500 5510 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 ' 08/23/01 ' 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 Composite Volume Openjnt 08/22/01 8222 43668 Live Cattle Daily Prices As ofThursday, 23 August Date Aug 01 7152 7180 7102 7117 Oct 01 7365 7375 7297 7312 Dec 01 7470 7485 7415 7455 Feb 02 7615 7637 7590 7610 Apr 02 7777 7797 7760 7790 Jun 02 7400 7435 7397 7420 Aug 02 7480 7495 7470 7485 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 Composite Volume Open_lnt 08/22/01 13425 103140 Pork Bellies Daily Prices As ofThursday, 23 August Date 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 08/23/01 Aug 01 9525 9540 9367 9367 -300 Feb 02 7775 7800 7700 7792 +2 Mar 02 7750 7820 7730 7820 . +25 May 0i 7900 7950 7900 7950 +6O Jul 02 7950 7950 7950 7950 Aug 02 7875 7875 7875 7875 Composite Volume Open_lnt 08/22/01 904 2127 Through the month of June, production of Anjerican and Total cheese was down 4.8 per cent and 1.6 percent, respec tively. Unlike butter, cheese consumption must be holding up fairly well give these low stocks numbers. That explains why cheese prices are so firm. USDA released the milk pro duction report. Milk production in July for 20 major dairy states was down 1.2 percent over a year ago. Production totaled 12.1 billion pounds. Product! jn per cow averaged 1,555 pounds in July, down 6 pounds over a year ago. And cow numbers fori 20 major states in July was 7.75 million head, even with June 2001. The futures markets at the Chicaga Mercantile Exchange attempted to digest all of this market information. As of Aug. 17, the Class 111 futures rose from $15.55 per CWT for August 2001 to $15.60 for Sep tember 2001. Thereafter it fell to $l3 per CWT by December 2001. Class IV futures on August 17 rose from $14.95 per CWT for August 2001 to $15.50 Open High Low Last Chge 4612 2918 255 384 Open High Low Last Chge v o penjnt 2058 2981 6747 46465 3024 24020 897 16990 346 7148 227 5349 125 187 Open High Low Last Chge Prev * „ Pr f v * Volume Openjnt 348 292 504 1787 < 48 ' 25 3 21 1 2 0 0 Prev. Openjnt 26254 11450 3898 1304 308 309 94 39 12 +45 -15 for September 2001, falling to $13.60 by December 2001. The market is anticipating that there will be some milk supply response by the end of the year. Clearly the milk supply has been tight in August because of the heat and humidity. Sep tember milk will continue to be tight as children return back to school. But what if we assume that cow numbers remain level through year-end, and that milk per cow rebounds 2 percent over a year ago starting in October? Milk production for 20 major states will be 1.5 percent ahead of a year ago by December. What do you think this will do to the milk price?