Al6-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 1,2002 GRAIN, CATTLE, HOG. & MILK BFP FUTURES MARKETS Markets Courtesy of Chicago Board and Mercantile Exchange Closing Bids: Thursday, May 30, 2002 Com 05/29/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 *CASH* JUL 02 SEP 02 DEC 02 MAR 03 MAY 03 JUL 03 SEP 03 DEC 03 MAR 04 JUL 04 DEC 04 Total 05/29/02 Soybeans 05/29/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 *CASH* JUL 02 AUG 02 SEP 02 NOV 02 JAN 03 MAR 03 MAY 03 JUL 03 SEP 03 NOV 03 Total 05/29/02 Soybean Meal 05/29/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 *CASH* JUL 02 AUG 02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 Total 05/29/02 Weekly Dairy Market Outlook Ken Bailey Penn State May 24,2002 Dairy Markets Weakening • April milk up 2.9 percent. • Dairy commodity inventory growing. • Cool spring dampening ice cream demand. • Fall futures prices down $1 per CWT. Unlike last spring, there’s plenty of milk to go around. In fact, there are enough milk trucks running down the inter state that butter prices are hitting new spring lows. The market is experiencing a classic spring flush. The bigger questions are, will the milk sup ply begin to slow down with the summer heat, and will consumer demand be strong enough to push up fall milk prices? High 2144 2130 2196 2296 2372 2404 2434 2384 2420 2482 2526 2434 Open 2114 2180 2282 2356 2390 2414 2380 2406 2462 2526 2420 Volume Qpen_lnt 72344 423103 High 4910 5032 4970 4870 4800 4834 4840 4840 4860 4790 4830 Open 4960 4900 4796 4724 4764 4810 4780 4840 4790 4790 Volume Open_lnt 59525 168894 Open High Low Last 16700 16700 16700 1680 1645 1671 1647 1611 1636 1648 1615 1583 1550 1533 1528 1513 1490 1500 1510 1510 1505 1500 Volume Open_lnt 31065 137672 Let’s begin with the April milk production report. April milk production for 20 select states last year fell 2 per cent relative to the year before. The spring flush last year just did not materialize. Thus, an increase of 2.9 percent this April repre sents only a slight recovery rela tive to production in 2000. The number that caught my eye was the growth in cow num bers. The number of milking cows on farms rose 8,000 head from March to April of this year. That is not a lot of cows and may just reflect a boost in spring calv ing. The concern, however, is that this trend will continue through the summer. That would mean farmers are expanding despite paying relatively high prices for dairy replacements. Dairy commodity inventories LOW 2144 2092 2162 2260 2336 2374 2402 2374 2394 2460 2514 2420 Low 4910 4942 4892 4790 4720 4764 4794 4780 4840 4790 4784 1580 1550 1530 1524 1512 1490 1495 1495 1495 1490 1495 1613 1579 1560 1550 1533 1510 1510 1510 1510 1505 1500 Lean Hogs Date 05/29/02 *CASH* 05/30/02 Jun 02 05/30/02 Jul 02 05/30/02 Aug 02 05/30/02 Oct 02 05/30/02 Dec 02 05/30/02 Feb 03 05/30/02 Apr 03 05/30/02 May 03 05/30/02 Jun 03 Chge + 50 + 10 + 12 + 14 + 12 + 12 + 10 +2 + 4 + 6 unch + 6 Last 2144 2124 2192 2294 2370 2402 2434 2376 2416 2482 2514 2430 Composite Volume Open_lnt 05/29/02 11915 32435 Live Cattle Date 05/29/02 *CASH* 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 Chge -15 + 50 +42 + 54 + 62 + 62 + 62 + 60 + 64 + 60 + 66 Last 4910 5012 4952 4852 4792 4822 4836 4840 4852 4790 4830 Composite Volume Openjnt 05/29/02 12636 97940 Pork Bellies Date 05/29/02 *CASH* 0 5250 5250 5250 05/30/02 Jul 02 5620373055055622 05/30/02 Aug 02 5565 5677 5475 5580 05/30/02 Feb 03 5950 600059506000 05/30/02 Mar 03 5970 597059705970 05/30/02 May 03 6005 6005 6005 6005 Chge +l5O + 18 + 18 1605 1569 1553 1546 1531 1499 1497 1495 1495 1490 1500 Composite Volume Open_lnt 05/29/02 732 3127 Oats 05/29/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 05/30/02 + 5 + 14 Total 05/29/02 are also on the rise. There is 1.05 billion pounds of nonfat dry milk in government warehouses. That is up 83 percent relative to a year ago. Anyway you look at it, we’ve got a powder problem. Clearly USDA will be forced to lower the support price of nonfat dry milk from current levels. There is so much product in government warehouses that USDA is offer ing to sell nonfat dry milk for manufacture into casein or casei nates. And the global market has made export opportunities non existent. The world price of non Previous Previous Open High Low Last Chge Volume Qpenjnt 0 0 4924 8756 4055 11431 2353 5170 197 3145 378 3430 4 490 3 9 0 1 1 3 0 487748774877 4620 470745724615 4695 481546404667 4595471745654592 3845396038103932 3705 379236753717 3985 408039804022 4100 415041004120 4500450045004500 5120 515051175117 ✓a ii- u i i Previous Previous Open High Low Last Chge Volume opcnJnt 0 0 0 640064006400 unch Jun 02 6210 621060776077 Aug 02 6197 620560806080 Oct 02 6502 650263906395 Dec 02 6652 665765706577 Feb 03 6740 674066506662 Apr 03 6860 687568006820 Jun 03 6610 661066106610 n- ur t i./-u Previous Previous Open High Lon- Last Chge Volume Qpen 0 0 641 2368 89 682 2 74 0 2 0 1 Open *CASH* JUL 02 SEP 02 DEC 02 MAR 03 MAY 03 1730 1364 1352 1400 1400 Volume Qpen_lnt 2215 9288 fat dry milk continues to remain depressed at $0.57 per pound. That compares to our domestic price of $0.89-$0.90 per pound in Western markets. Butter inventories at the end of April were up 76 percent relative to a year ago. There is a lot of cream out there and it’s not find ing its way into ice cream pro duction yet. A cool spring is hold ing back consumer demand. Excess cream and no place to use it has sent butter prices plunging, (Turn to Page A 22) -53 -27 -38 -150 -150 -125 -95 -83 -82 +3O unch +25 +25 +4O unch +75 High 2324 1850 1450 1374 1400 1400 LOW 2324 1724 1364 1350 1400 1400 Average Farm Feed Costs for Handy Reference To help farmers across the state to have handy reference of commodity input costs in their feeding operations for DHIA re cord sheets or to develop livestock feed cost data, here’s last week’s average costs of various ingredients as compiled from regional reports across the state of Penn sylvania. Remember, these are averages, so you will need to adjust your figures up or down according to your location and the quality of your crop. Corn, No.2y 2.35 bu., 4.20 cwt. Wheat, N 0.2 2.56 bu., 4.28 cwt. Barley, N 0.3 1.78 bu., 3.82 cwt. Oats, N 0.2 1.93 bu., 6.03 cwt. Soybeans, No.l 4.41 bu., 7.36 cwt. Ear Com 66.85 ton, 3.34 cwt. Alfalfa Hay 130.50 ton, 6.53 cwt. Mixed Hay 129.25 ton, 6.46 cwt. Timothy Hay 116.75 ton, 5.84 cwt. 24060 31101 26645 11364 3248 1521 5160 4165 1712 1332 241 25 Chge + 84 + 62 + 66 + 14 + 14 unch Last 2324 1846 1446 1372 1400 1400