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Winning the Dairy Exports Battle Dr Marin Bozic, University of Minnesota North Dakota State Dairy Convention November 6, 2013. Dairy Exports and Class I Base Price.
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Winning the Dairy Exports Battle Dr Marin Bozic, University of Minnesota North Dakota State Dairy Convention November 6, 2013
Dairy Exports and Class I Base Price • Class I Base Price is Higher-Of Class III and Class IV Advanced Prices. For most of the time since 2000, Class III Price (Cheese & Whey) dictated Class I Base price. Class IV Price (Nonfat Dry Milk) has been higher for most of 2013, and is forecasted higher throughout 2014. Dairy exports lift Class IV price which in turns increases Class I Base price. Source: Jerry Dryer, First Monday
Dairy Exports 2013 Year-To-Date Growth • Exports as % of U.S. Production: 48% for NFDM, 5.9 % for Cheese, 6.2% for Butterfat, 51% for Dry Sweet Whey and 74% for Lactose • In July 2013, 17.6% of total milk solids exported. • Over the last five years, over two thirds of the growth in the U.S. milk production was exported.
Long-term Outlook on Cheese Consumption • U.S. Population growth and per capita cheese consumption growth slowing down.
Over the next 10 years, U.S. milk production may grow by 25 billion lbs. Where will we sell that? • Needed increase in exports (vs 2012): • Milk Powders: 56% • Butterfat: 270% • Cheese: 60% • In order to export products accounting for 10 billion lbs of milk in 2023, the U.S. would need to capture 70% of the entire forecasted increase in world’s imported demand for skim milk powder and even higher share of additional butter trade.
Important Questions • Where is the U.S. positioned globally? • What is our role, what should it be? • What needs to change for the U.S. to be a power-player globally? • What are the drivers and constraints over the next decade? • U.S. domestic demand? • EU Agricultural Policy Reforms? End of dairy quotas? • Where will China go?
U.S. Dairy Exports • U.S. dairy exports now consume one day worth of milk production per week. • Over the last 10 years, over half of the growthin U.S. milk production was exported. • Over the last 5 years, over two thirds of the growth in U.S. milk production was exported.
2012 Composition of Dairy Exports ($) Fluid & Soft Products (6%) Consumer Goods (11%) Other Comm. (2%) Butter (5%) Lactose (11%) Cheese (21%) Dry Whey (19%) Milk Powders (26%)
New Zealand dairy production capacity? All Dairy Cattle (‘000) Most of the recent growth in dairy herd in the Southern Island: Over the last 5 years 4 million reduction in sheep, and 840,000 more dairy cattle.
The Fonterra Way • Economies of Scale • Market Access • Institutional Innovation • Global Dairy Trade • Trading Among Farmers
Ranking Countries by Cost of Production Source: T. Hemme, Presentation at NWDEPA 2013, Boston, MA, based on IFCN Dairy Report 2012
Latent Demand Gap: A Useful Heuristic? “A latent demand gap is developing and creating a sizeable, though finite, window of opportunity for U.S. dairy.” Bain and Co. 2009
Back to the Blackboard… Price S D′ D Quantity
Back to the Blackboard… Price D′ S D Quantity
Is the U.S. the Dairy Balancing Plant for the World? presented at the North Dakota State Dairy Convention, November 6, 2013. Dr. Marin Bozic mbozic@umn.edu Department of Applied Economics University of Minnesota-Twin Cities 317c Ruttan Hall 1994 Buford Avenue St Paul, MN 55108 Thank you for your help: Susan Grelling, Land O’Lakes Tom Wegner, Land O’Lakes Gary Weber, Land O’Lakes Brad Gehrke, US Dairy Export Council Prof. Brian W. Gould, UW-Madison