Al6-Lancaster Farming,Saturday, 'Ndvefriber 1 £>,'2C(o3 1 GRAIN, CATTLE, HOG, & MILK BFP FUTURES MARKETS Markets Courtesy of Chicago Board and Mercantile Exchange Com iMonth OpeningjHigh jLow | ;03Dec I 04Mar 242 1/2 244 1/4 249 1/2 250 1/4 245 1/2, 252 253 3/4 2491/2i Oft May 04jul " 255 1/2:256 1/2 252 1/4 04Sep [ 249 247 1/4 248 1/2 246 3/4' 252,252 1/21251 1/21 04Dec IqsMar OSMfry OSJuI [ OSDec | 257 257 257 i Month [Opening |High Soybeans Month Opening High 03Nov 771 775 04Jan 776 779 768 04Mar 04May 734 740 731 736 738 04Jui 718 721 1/2 696 697 04Aug 04Sep , 04Nov 641 646 1/2 578 1/2 583 577 1/2 580 1/2 580 05 Jan 05Mar Month i Opening'High Soybean Meal Month |Opening [High {Low i ' I ’ 245.7 247.0 t 241.8| 243.3|244.9 239.7' 04Jan 04Mar j 240.3 242.2 237.3 04May, 229.0 ,231.5 228.5 223.3 225.51222.5 04Jul i 04Aug | 215.5 216.5 213.7 ;d4Spp"| 04Oct 204.01204.51202.21 177.3 177.3 i 176.0 \ 176.5 b 176.6 a 173.81173^81171.5 iosJ«ir! , ; 1171.5 b 172.0 a 05Mar ‘i ; 1 171.5 b! 172.0 a i Month I Opening |Hlgh [ Low i 04Dejc Nov. 7,2003 DAIRY PRODUCTS REPORT RELEASED • Dairy components allocated to cheese. • Butter production down. • Cash cheese prices weaken. USDA released the Dairy Products report this week. It shows how milk components were allocated to the production Closing Bids: Thursday. November 13, 2003 239| 247 1/2 1246 3/4 251 1/2 |250 1/2 253 1/4 | 248 3/4 | 2511 248 j 248 1/4 ‘247 1/2 ;247 3/4 252 ; ;254 1/2 nT ;245 3/4 n [Low Low 762 766 760 768 1/2 7701/2 772 714 718 719 691 693 640 641 1/4 580 580 iLow 244.5 244.8 242.5 242.3 240.2 240.0 231.2 225.5 i 216.0 216.5 204.0 204.5 of dairy products for the month of September 2003. Overall it shows more components were al located to cheese production and less to butter and nonfat dry milk. If this trend continues, ex pect lower stocks of butter in early 2004 and more of cheese. One would expect overall dairy processing to be down relative to a year ago since milk production Settle Closing 241 1240 1/2 240 3/4 247 254 253 1/2; 248 3/41 254 1/2 1 ' 257 257 , 245 3/4 Closing [Settle [Settle Closing 770 772 775 777 769 1/2 718 1/2 694 693 1/2 641 1/4 581 1/4 580 582 580 582 n Settle Closing Settle 244.7 Closing 242.4 240.1 231.2 225.5 216.2 204.2 176.5 173.6 171.7 171.7 Closing | Settle Lean Hogs Date 11/12/03 *CASH* 11/13/03 Dec 03 11/13/03 Feb 04 11/13/03 Apr 04 11/13/03 May 04 11/13/03 Jun 04 11/13/03 Jul 04 11/13/03 Aug 04 11/13/03 Oct 04 11/13/03 Dec 04 (Net Chg +4 +2 251 +4 ; Unch + 16 Composite Volume Open_lnt 11/12/03 14440 42742 +24 +2Ol 252 Live Cattle +2O +2 Date +6 1 1/12/03*CASH* 0104271042710427 -4 11/13/03 Nov 0310075101901002010030 -90 11/13/03 Dec 03 9440 9600 9410 9482 -50 11/13/03 Jan 04 9330 9415 9275 9380 +5 11/13/03 Feb 04 8995 9140 8980 9105 +43 11/13/03 Apr 04 8160 8290 8147 8287 + 102 11/13/03 Jun 04 7440 7550 7440 7522 +72 11/13/03 Aug 04 7295 7385 7282 7352 +7O 11/13/03 Oct 04 7540 7590 7520 7542 +67 11/13/03 Dec 04 7675 7695 7675 7695 +45 [Net Chg Net Chg +2O 771 776 +6O +66 737 +64 Composite Volume Open_lnt 11/12/03 16206 113973 +52 +34 Pork Bellies Date +46 +36 11/12/03 *CASH* 0780078007800 11/13/03 Feb 04 8600 880585758745 11/13/03 Mar 04 8560 875085608630 11/13/03 May 04 8800 880088008800 11/13/03 Jul 04 8900 890088708900 11/13/03 Aug 04 8850 885088508850 -20 582 -30 'Net Chg [NetChgi Composite Volume Open_lnt 11/12/03 375 1991 1 Unch; +4 Oats +25 [Month i Opening [High +27 |o3to#,! 145 J /2 i 1453/4 l [o4j|f|ri 148 1/4! ’ 1491 [6||sy[ 150 1/2 150 1/2 + 19 + 17 +s' [o4|iA [ +7 W I |o4]Dec id > J r ■* +7 +7 Mouth [Opening {High ;Net Chg, is lower. For the month of Sep tember, USDA estimated U.S. milk production was 13.4 billion pounds. On a daily average basis, the September U.S. milk supply fell 0.5 percent relative to a year ago. According to my calculations for the month of September, the Dairy Products report shows a one percent growth in the amount of protein and other dairy solids components going into manufactured dairy prod ucts, and a 4.2 percent drop in butterfat use. Butter and nonfat dry milk for September 2003 fell 21.6 and 8.9 percent, respectively, from a year ago. This is the second month of significant declines in butter and nonfat dry milk production. For the period January through Sep tember, cumulative butter and nonfat dry milk production fell 7.9 and 6.3 percent, respectively. On the other hand, total cheese production in September grew 3.3 percent relative to a year ago. Cumulative total cheese produc- ~ U* UI ¥ Previous Previous Open High Low Last Chge Vo , ume ope „ 0 0 6204 16117 7033 16853 846 5687 27 830 175 1871 67 623 72 415 16 275 0 69 0 475047504750 5020 507549855005 5620 573056055662 5925603059226002 6130618061156180 6380 648063806465 6200 626562006240 5945 602059456020 5350 535553305330 5295 529752755295 „ ..... . Previous Previous Open H.gh Low Last Chge V olumeOpen_ln( 0 0 85 394 7530 39616 31 1241 4928 38955 2511 18083 736 11054 283 4008 87 594 15 28 ~ u- u. i Previous Previous Open High Low Last Chge Vo|ume ope „ 0 0 369 1690 2 139 104 48 Low I 142 1/2 i 145 1/4 145 146 1/21148 3/4 |149 148 3/4! 1511153 1/2! [Low tion through September 2003 grew 0.4 percent. In the cheese category, growth is mainly com ing from the production of Ital ian cheeses, which was up 4.7 percent in September. Cumula tive Italian cheese production grew 2.1 percent. It does not take a rocket scien tist to figure out what’s going on here. Milk used for Class IV pur poses has fetched a butter and nonfat dry milk price of just $l.lB and $O.BO per pound, re spectively. On the other hand, milk used for Class 111 purposes got a cheese price of $1.60 per pound for blocks and slightly lower for barrels. That has moved milk from butter/powder produc tion into the more lucrative cheese production. Since market prices will respond, this could have the effect of “equalizing” cheese and butter/powder prices. Cheese prices at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange continued to fall this week. Block cheese prices fell a nickel per pound this week from $1.48 per pound on -163 -200 +-183 f 138 fl6o +■l2s +-100 Closing 150 b 15111531/2 150 n | 151 n! I i I ' Closing Monday to $1.43 per pound by week’s end. Barrel cheese prices fell from $1.4550 on Monday to $1.3950 per pound by Friday. Grade AA butter prices strength ened slightly from $1.1850 per pound on Monday to $1.20 per pound by Friday. These price di rections made sense, given the Dairy Products report. Average Farm Feed Costs for Handy Reference To help {aimers across the state to have handy reference of commodity input costs in their feeding operations for DHIA record 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 Pennsylvania. Remember, these are averages, so you will need to adjust your figures up or down accord ing to your location and the quality of your crop. Com, No.2y 2.67 bu., 4.78 cwt. Wheat, N 0.2 3.31 bu., 5.53 cwt. Barley, N 0.3 1.98 bu., 4.23 cwt. Oats, N 0.2 —1.83 bu„ 5.70 cwt. Soybeans, No 1 7.32 bu., 12.22 cwt. Ear Com 65.38 ton, 3.27 cwt. Alfalfa Hay 121.75 ton, 6.09 cwt Mixed Hay —129.25 ton, 6 46 cwt. Timothy Hay 128.00 ton, 6.4 cwt | Settle [Net Chg +2 ; _ i 45! ; 148 3/41 +2 150 T +4 153 1/2 1501 151 +24 Unch Unch jSettle. Net Chg