GRAIN, CATTLE. HOG, & MILK BFP FUTURES MARKETS Markets Courtesy of Chicago Board and Mercantile Exchange Closing Bids; Thursday, May 8, 2003 Com 04/03/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 *CASH* MAY 03 JUL 03 SEP 03 DEC 03 MAR 04 MAY 04 JUL 04 SEP 04 DEC 04 DEC 05 Total 04/03/03 Soybeans 04/04/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 04/07/03 *CASH* MAY 03 JUL 03 AUG 03 SEP 03 NOV 03 JAN 04 MAR 04 MAY 04 JUL 04 NOV 04 Total 04/04/03 Soybean Meal 04/03/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 04/04/03 *CASH* MAY 03 JUL 03 AUG 03 SEP 03 OCT 03 DEC 03 JAN 04 MAR 04 MAY 04 JUL 04 AUG 04 SEP 04 OCT 04 DEC 04 Total 04/03/03 May 4,2003 ECONOMY SENDS MIXED SIGNALS • U.S. GDP weak, unemploy ment worse. • Consumer confidence up. • Demand so far remains weak. I’ve been out of the country for three weeks and it seems the markets have not changed much. I just returned fronj .a, yolunteer High 2516 2394 2404 2400 2402 2454 2484 2504 2420 2410 2380 Open 2382 2386 2384 2394 2450 2474 2496 2420 2396 2380 Volume Open_lnt 62063 419289 High 5840 6020 5990 5854 5540 5274 5300 5310 5310 5310 5070 Open 5950 5960 5800 5490 5230 5250 5310 5306 5310 5060 Volume Qpen_lnt 43493 242204 Open High 17300 1748 1738 1690 1612 1542 1531 1530 1545 1553 1565 1555 1550 1507 1515 1718 1708 1665 1593 1520 1512 1519 1535 1550 1560 1555 1550 1507 1515 Volume Open_lnt 23427 151790 assignment in Moldova. Last week’s commodity reports from the Chicago Mercantile Ex change show more of the same weak commodity prices for butter and cheese. The futures markets indicate outlook for Class 111 prices is still weak. And the news about the overall economy is mixed. The European news kept talk ing about la “Baghdad Bounce;*’ >. Last 2516 2390 2396 2390 2396 2450 2482 2502 2420 2410 2380 Low 2516 2376 2384 2382 2392 2446 2474 2494 2420 2394 2380 Last 5840 5986 5972 5836 5520 5264 5284 5310 5310 5310 5062 Low 5840 5950 5940 5790 5490 5224 5250 5310 5294 5310 5060 Last 17300 1745 1736 1589 1611 1538 1529 1528 1536 1546 1555 1545 1545 1507 1510 Low 17300 1715 1705 1663 1593 1518 1511 1519 1532 1545 1552 1545 1545 1507 1510 The hope was that a successful end to the Iraq conflict would im mediately lead to a stronger U.S. and European economy. It’s still too early to tell if that is going to happen. The nation’s unemploy ment rate rose to 6 percent in April, and the first quarter Gross National Product was half what market watchers hoped for. Yet consumer confidence is up for the first time in months. The Conference Board reported that April’s index for consumer confi dence rose sharply from the month before, effectively ending a four-month period of declining confidence in the economy. That is very important to the U.S. dairy industry. More consumer spending could result in greater demand for dairy products. There is some good market BUSINESS PAGE APPEARS IN SECTION D See the latest In equipment and material news, promotions and new hires, and burgeoning ag ventures on the business news page located in Section 0 this Issue! t 1 1 I «| ' l - « j, * Lean Hogs Date 05/07/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 Chge -14 + 2 + 4 + 2 unch unch -2 unch unch + 10 +4 Composite Volume Open_lnt 05/07/03 10288 40586 Live Cattle Date 05/07/03 *CASH* 05/08/03 May 03 05/08/03 Jim 03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 05/08/03 Chge + 43 + 80 + 82 + 84 + 70 + 70 + 64 + 64 + 64 + 64 + 2 Composite Volume Open_lnt 05/07/03 18019 103483 Pork Bellies Date 05/07/03 *CASH* 0 930093009300 unch 05/08/03 May 03 9450 970094209690 +195 05/08/03 Jul 03 9135931591009275 +lO3 05/08/03 Aug 03 8940 909088858990 +4O 05/08/03 Feb 04 7890 789078757875 unch 05/08/03 Mar 04 7892 789278907892 -88 Composite Volume Open_lnt 05/07/03 715 3171 Oats 04/07/03 04/08/03 04/08/03 04/08/03 04/08/03 04/08/03 04/08/03 Total 04/07/03 ~ • ■_ i . Previous Previous Open High l,«» 1-astChge yo|u|nc open ln , 0 0 322 2006 5063 18920 3160 8101 763 5021 621 3456 263 2279 49 480 41 283 6 39 CASH" 0 558555855585 +lO3 May 03 5825 5872 5825 5870 +63 Jim 03 6377 6425 63456420 +63 Jul 03 6472 654064556537 +55 Aug 03 6350 63806335 6370 +l5 Oct 03 5485 550054755495 -7 Dec 03 5325 5345 53205325 -12 Feb 04 5665 5675 56505672 -8 Apr 04 5960 596059255960 unch Jun 04 6482 648564556467 -13 ~ n- 1.1 i * Previous Previous Open High bow Last Chge Vo|ume o|)en |n( 0 0 345 1945 8633 45665 0 770077007700 +5O 7635 763575977620 -10 7315 733573027310 +8 6945 698069456980 6895 690568756890 7097 710270607065 7335 734573127317 7465 747074577462 7570 757075457560 7150 715071507150 Jul 03 Aug 03 Oct 03 Dec 03 Feb 04 Apr 04 Jun 04 ~ i,. , i ¥ Previous Previous Open High Low La S . Chge Volume Qpen 0 0 136 335 517 2564 49 216 13 55 0 I Open *CASH* MAY 03 JUL 03 SEP 03 DEC 03 MAR 04 MAY 04 1882 1632 1492 1474 1490 1580 Volume Open_lnt 904 6122 news. By now everyone knows the April federal order class prices. The Class 111 price rose $0.30 per CWT to $9.41 per CWT as cheese prices marginally strengthened. Also, commercial disappearance numbers for the period December 2002-February 2003 show some modest increases in “Other Cheese” (mainly moz zarella) and fluid milk sales. It’s still early in the season to be talking about a market change. The weather has not yet turned to summer heat, and the direction for the overall U.S. economy is still uncertain. Also, the milk production report has yet to confirm that dairy produc ers are responding to lower milk prices by reducing supplies. An other month will provide more market intelligence. High 2062 1904 1634 1492 1474 1490 1580 Low 2062 1874 1612 1492 1464 1490 1580 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 2.95 bu., 5.28 cwt. Wheat, N 0.2 3.07 bu., 5.12 cwt. Barley, N 0.3 2.18 bu., 4.67 cwt. Oats, N 0.2 2.21 bu., 6.89 cwt. Soybeans, No.l 5.81 bu., 9.7 cwt. Ear Corn 88.88 ton, 4.44 cwt. Alfalfa Hay 162.50 ton, 8.13 cwt. Mixed Hay 155.00 ton, 7.75 cwt, Timothy Hay 156.25 ton, 7.81 cwt. i ♦ i. I « II . I HMII I * 160 26170 16982 8259 3495 787 20 11 4754 2511 1261 380 104 20 Chge + 36 -10 -12 -6 -4 -30 unch Last 2062 1876 1612 1492 1464 1490 1580