Slipping milk production and residual COVID-related volatility could cause something truly rare in dairy: An average Class IV price for 2021 that’s higher than the average for Class III.
This last happened in 2013, when the market was powered by a dramatic increase in exports.
Ted and T3 explain why the financing model for massive new cheese plants is a partial contributor to the phenomenon and try to predict farmer and agency responses.
T3: Let me start by throwing a couple of overall milk production numbers out, so we can establish what we think milk production is going to do in general in 2022. So the challenge with talking about milk production, especially when you're talking about it in terms of year over year right now, is we're measuring against last year. And last year was the pandemic, and everything was a mess, and I'm not sure if measuring against last year with all its volatility really helps us understand the real situation. So I went back really quickly, and I actually calculated what milk production has done so far this year relative to 2019 rather than 2020, and it was kind of interesting. In the first quarter, milk production in 2021 was up 4.3% over 2019, so a little over two percent a year of milk production growth. In the second quarter of 2021, milk production was up over 2019, 4.3%, the exact same number as the first quarter, and a little over two percent.
The third quarter, which we just wrapped up a little under a month ago was only up 3.1% over 2019. Now the fourth quarter of 2020 was up 2.9% over 2019, but it's starting to look like we might go negative for the fourth quarter of this year — which means on a two year basis, we may be up less than 2.9% over a two year basis. And so when you're comparing everything against 2019, it becomes a lot more clear that we're seeing overall milk production shift into an almost negative decline, rather than measuring against the year over year noise that we've been trying to figure out when we're dealing with a pandemic year last year from 4.3% to 4.3% to 3.1%. And I'm going to guess in the fourth quarter we may end up at 2.7%, so it's clearly declining at an increasing rate.
Ted Jr: I think it would be useful to discuss the dynamics of that. And referring back to Jacob's chart where he charted all the prices for agricultural commodities: corns, soybeans, sorghum, cotton, you name it. And then in the same chart, he included the milk pricing and it showed 25-30% increase in agricultural commodity prices but only a nominal increase in milk pricing. It was very stark. We have had increases in production that basically have caused us to have inventory, up to now at least in both powder and cheese. Class I sales have been less than lucrative. They've been declining on an annual basis. We've built new cheese plants. And when we build a cheese plant, we're building a multi hundred million dollar plant these days which requires that it be kept full. Cheese plants need to be balanced just the same as class I plants need to be balanced.
The difference comes out in the class IV market, and class IV is butter and powder. So we look at the last month's results, then we see that there is in the last several months a decrease in production. And I think the reason for that is probably pretty simple: the costs of making milk have not warranted increasing the production for the milk. We have increased feed costs. We've got increased maintenance costs on equipment, everything, land, you name it. The cost of running a dairy have gone up. It doesn't make any difference whether you're a big dairy or a small dairy, but I would guess that the costs of running a small dairy percentage-wise are a heck of a lot greater than running a big dairy,