Archive for trade war impact on dairy

Global Dairy Markets April 7th, 2025: Regional Divergence Amid Trade Tensions

Global dairy markets split: Europe slumps as Oceania booms. Trade wars ignite. Smart farmers chase fat percentages to survive 2025 chaos.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Global dairy markets face stark regional divides, with European futures declining (-0.8% butter, -1.2% whey) despite physical prices holding 31.9% above 2024 levels, while Oceania milk production grows (+1.2% NZ). Escalating U.S.-China trade tensions threaten exports as cheese emerges as a bright spot (+19% EU prices). Farmers must prioritize component efficiency (4.33% Belgian milkfat), diversify trade routes, and leverage futures markets to navigate volatility. With EU production declining (-5% Belgium) and component-driven profits rising, strategic agility separates survivors from casualties.

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

  • Regional Rift Deepens: Europe’s bearish futures (-0.8% butter) clash with Asia’s bullish SGX trades (+1.0% SMP).
  • Component Efficiency Pays: Belgian milk’s 4.33% fat content offsets volume losses, proving quality trumps quantity.
  • Trade Wars Reshape Flows: U.S. cheese exports hit records (+7.3%) despite China’s 34% retaliatory tariffs.
  • Cheese Dominates Margins: EU cheese prices (+19% YoY) outshine sliding butter, signaling processor priorities.
  • Oceania Quietly Wins: NZ milk collections (+1.2%) and efficient culling (+9.1%) showcase sustainable growth models.
global dairy trends, dairy market analysis 2025, milk production decline, trade war impact on dairy, cheese production growth

This week, the global dairy landscape presents a stark contrast, with European futures markets trending downward while physical markets remain substantially above year-ago levels. Oceania continues showing production growth in stark contrast to European declines, creating regional supply imbalances that smart producers are turning into profit opportunities. Meanwhile, Trump’s sweeping tariffs have triggered retaliatory measures from key dairy-importing nations, threatening established trade flows as U.S. exports already showed weakness.

FUTURES MARKETS REVEAL BATTLE BETWEEN EUROPEAN BEARS AND ASIAN BULLS

European traders hit the panic button last week, with EEX futures declining across all significant categories despite robust year-over-year gains. Butter futures led the slide, dropping 0.8% to €7,201 for the April-November strip, with open interest reduced by 28 lots to 2,831 lots. This reduction suggests traders are cutting their exposure amid increasing uncertainty.

SMP wasn’t spared either, sliding 0.5% to €2,494 despite a substantial increase in open interest by 724 lots to 5,512 lots. Whey futures performed worst, tumbling 1.2% to €904, reflecting challenges in the protein ingredient sector.

Meanwhile, Singapore’s SGX painted a dramatically different picture with mostly positive price movements:

ProductPrice ChangeNew Average Price
WMP+0.6%$3,797
SMP+1.0%$2,837
AMFUp$6,666
Butter+0.4%$6,871

This stark divergence between European and Asian futures suggests regional factors drive trader sentiment, with European concerns about economic headwinds constraining dairy demand while Asian markets remain comparatively optimistic.

EU PHYSICAL MARKETS: SHORT-TERM BLUES, LONG-TERM GREEN

Don’t let this week’s dips fool you. The EU’s dairy quotation system revealed short-term pressure despite substantial year-over-year strength. The butter index dropped 0.7% to €7,568, with Dutch butter taking the biggest hit at 1.3% (€100) to €7,400. German butter slipped 0.7% to €7,475, while French butter remained steady at €7,830.

The annual comparison is genuinely eye-popping – the butter index stands at a staggering 31.9% (€1,831) above last year’s levels. This massive annual appreciation has been a boon for European dairy producers, who’ve maintained production despite rising costs and regulatory pressures.

SMP followed a similar pattern, with the index losing 0.7% to €2,422 yet remaining 3.7% (€87) above year-ago levels. Whey prices also weakened to €875 but stand an impressive 36.3% (€233) above 12 months ago. Only WMP provided a weekly bright spot, with the index gaining 0.8% to €4,435, driven by a substantial 2.5% rise in French WMP.

CHEESE INDICES: THE REAL MONEY MAKERS

European cheese indices all posted modest weekly declines but maintained impressive annual gains that suggest fundamental strength in the category:

Cheese TypeWeekly ChangeNew PriceYoY Gain
Cheddar Curd-0.7%€4,795+18.2%
Mild Cheddar-0.4%€4,810+19.1%
Young Gouda-0.9%€4,380+13.1%
Mozzarella-1.3%€4,284+19.2%

Despite short-term fluctuations, these substantial year-over-year gains across all cheese categories point to strong structural support for cheese values. This aligns with the EU dairy forecast for 2025, which projects increased cheese production even as milk production declines – a clear sign that processors prioritize this high-value segment.

GDT AUCTION: POWDER POWER PLAY

The latest Global Dairy Trade auction (TE377) saw the overall index climb 1.1% to $4,250. SMP emerged as the star performer with a robust 5.9% gain to $2,876, while WMP edged down just 0.1% to $4,062.

The divergence between European and Oceanic powder values was highlighted by Solarec’s Belgian Regular WMP selling at $4,665 compared to Fonterra’s $3,980. Butter experienced the most significant decline among major products, falling 3.9% to $7,895, while AMF bucked the fat trend by rising 2.4% to $6,695. With 17,643 tonnes sold to 163 bidders, the auction demonstrated healthy participation despite market uncertainty.

PRODUCTION PATTERNS: OCEANIA SURGES WHILE EUROPE CONTRACTS

The most striking feature of this week’s data is the dramatic regional divergence in milk production. Fonterra reported New Zealand milk collections were up 1.2% year-over-year to 133.7 million kgMS, driven primarily by South Island’s impressive 2.9% growth. Fonterra Australia collections also grew by 1.6% to 8.2 million kgMS.

This Oceanic growth presents a stark contrast to European struggles:

CountryFeb 2025 ProductionYoY Change
Spain579kt-1.2%
Italy1.06 million tonnes-1.0%
Belgium340kt-5.0%

Belgian producers face the most dramatic challenges, with February collections plummeting 5.0% and cumulative production down 4.2% for 2025. This aligns with broader projections for EU dairy in 2025, which forecast a 0.2% overall decline in milk production due to shrinking cow herds, environmental regulations, and disease pressures.

COMPONENT EFFICIENCY: THE NEW BATTLEGROUND

Looking beyond raw volumes, component data reveals significant variations in milk quality that impact processor returns. Belgian milk posted the highest component levels with 4.33% milkfat and 3.53% protein, followed by Italian milk at 4.05% and 3.49% protein. Spanish milk recorded relatively lower components at 3.88% milkfat and 3.40% protein.

This variation explains why Spanish milk solids collections grew slightly (+0.2%) despite volume declines, while Italian milk solids remained flat and Belgian milk solids fell less dramatically (-3.3%) than their volume drop. The growing gap between volume and component trends underscores the industry’s increasing focus on nutritional density rather than raw output.

NZ DAIRY COW CULLING: FEWER, BETTER COWS

In a seemingly counterintuitive trend, New Zealand dairy cow slaughters increased 9.1% year-over-year to 76,649 head in February despite the growth in milk production. This suggests Kiwi producers achieve greater efficiency with fewer animals, likely through improved genetics and management practices.

The 12-month rolling dairy cow slaughter total was 771 thousand head, still 4.9% below the same period last year. This indicates a longer-term moderation in culling rates after more aggressive herd reductions in prior years.

TRADE WAR FALLOUT: DAIRY IN THE CROSSHAIRS

This week, the elephant in the room is the dramatic expansion of global trade tensions following Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcements. Speaking from the Rose Garden, Trump implemented sweeping tariffs on more than 180 countries and territories, using the trade deficit in each relationship as the basis for tariff calculations.

While Canada and Mexico were spared, many key markets for U.S. dairy products were hit. China swiftly announced retaliatory 34% tariffs on U.S. products, mirroring the percentage in the administration’s list. This comes on top of existing tariffs from earlier conflicts.

The timing couldn’t be worse for U.S. dairy exports, which already showed weakness. After adjusting for leap day, February exports fell 4.3% year-over-year, with particularly sharp declines in nonfat dry milk shipments, which hit their lowest February volume since 2016. Southeast Asian demand for milk powder has been notably weak.

The news wasn’t bad – U.S. cheese exports rose 7.3% to 99 million pounds, the largest February volume ever recorded. Butter exports also soared 134.2%, while anhydrous milkfat shipments increased nearly tenfold compared to February 2024.

5 SURVIVAL STRATEGIES FOR DAIRY FARMERS

The current global dairy environment presents both significant challenges and strategic opportunities:

  1. Component Over Volume – The growing divergence between volume and milk solids trends underscores the importance of breeding and management decisions that maximize component efficiency rather than raw output.
  2. Regional Strategies Must Differ – European producers face regulatory and cost constraints that necessitate a more significant focus on value-added processing. In contrast, Oceania producers may have more opportunity for volume growth.
  3. Cheese Holds Particular Promise – With cheese indices showing the most substantial year-over-year gains, processors will likely continue shifting milk toward this category, especially in Europe, where cheese production is forecast to increase.
  4. Trade War Demands Contingency Planning – Producers and processors heavily dependent on export markets must develop alternatives for potential disruption of established trade flows. Asian markets beyond China may present growing opportunities as trade patterns shift.
  5. Price Volatility Requires Sophisticated Risk Management – The divergence between European and Asian futures markets highlights the value of a diversified approach to hedging across multiple exchanges.

THE BOTTOM LINE: THINK GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL

The global dairy market continues sending contradictory signals that challenge straightforward interpretation. Short-term European weakness contrasts with robust year-over-year gains. Production trends show dramatic regional divergence, with Oceania growing while Europe contracts. Meanwhile, the escalating trade war adds significant uncertainty to market projections.

Smart dairy producers will look beyond immediate price signals to understand the structural factors driving longer-term trends. Focusing on efficiency improvements, component optimization, and strategic product mix decisions will prove more valuable than reactive responses to weekly market fluctuations.

This market isn’t for the faint-hearted. European producers are walking a tightrope between component premiums and volume cliffs. U.S. exporters are caught in a geopolitical meat grinder. Oceania? They’re just quietly printing money while the Northern Hemisphere fights.

The playbook’s clear: Think global, act local, and never stop chasing components. Because in this market, fat percentage isn’t just a number – it’s your lifeline.

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Cornocalypse 2025: How America’s Record Corn Planting Will Make or Break Your Dairy Operation

95M corn acres. Looming tariffs. Feed cost chaos. Your dairy survival guide as 2025’s perfect storm hits – act now or bleed margins.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The USDA’s 2025 planting report reveals a historic corn surge (95.3M acres) colliding with escalating trade wars and volatile feed economics. While abundant corn could lower feed costs, retaliatory tariffs threaten to erase dairy export gains and inflate input prices. Key strategies include locking in pre-harvest corn contracts, diversifying export markets, and prioritizing silage quality. With milk prices built on shrinking herds rather than demand growth, producers must balance immediate cost savings against long-term trade risks. Success hinges on acting before planting concludes, leveraging data-driven feed strategies, and adopting drought-resistant crops to hedge against uncertainty.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Corn gamble: Record 95.3M-acre planting could drop feed costs if tariffs don’t disrupt exports – but DEC futures below breakeven for 60% of dairies
  • Trade war reality: 25-50% of U.S. dairy exports now face tariffs; Southeast Asia/MENA markets offer $1.9B tariff-free alternative
  • Act now: Lock 60-70% of corn needs via contracts <$4.50/bushel; exploit BMR sorghum’s 22T/acre yield with better drought tolerance
  • Quality matters: Regional corn silage variations impact milk yield by 2kg/cow/day – test starch/NDF before contracting
  • Breed smarter: Genomic feed efficiency tools (87% accurate) critical as milk-feed ratio lingers at crisis-level 2.10
corn planting 2025, dairy feed costs, corn silage quality, trade war impact on dairy, milk-feed margin

The USDA’s bombshell March 31 planting report reveals farmers are gambling big on corn – 95.3 million acres big. That’s 4.7M more acres than in 2024, enough to fill every inch of New Hampshire and Vermont combined with nothing but cornstalks. But here’s the kicker – while grain farmers chase tariff-hedged profits, dairy producers are stuck playing feed cost roulette in a rapidly escalating trade war. We’ve crunched the numbers, talked to the experts, and uncovered the real story behind the corn boom that could define your margins for the next 18 months.

The Feed Cost Tightrope: Walking $4.43 Corn

Penn State’s Dr. Virginia Ishler puts it bluntly: “At today’s DEC futures, 60% of operations are feeding at a loss before the first kernel’s planted.” Her team’s latest models show:

Milk PriceBreakeven Feed Cost/Cow/DayCurrent Avg.
$17/cwt$4.66$5.82
$21/cwt$8.32$5.82

Source: Penn State Dairy Extension 2025 Margin Calculator

“These numbers assume perfect weather and zero trade disruptions,” Ishler warns. “Add a drought or Chinese tariff, and we’re looking at $7/cow/day feed costs by harvest.”

Ohio State’s corn silage expert Jason Hartschuh reveals a hidden opportunity: “Smart operators are locking in standing corn contracts at /ton – 18% below 2024 prices. But you must move before June planting delays push sellers to hold.”

The USDA forecasts the average farm price paid to farmers in 2025 at .20 per bushel, down nearly 4% compared with 2024, as corn stocks-to-use will rise to just shy of 13%. This projection assumes that the massive planting intentions materialize into actual acreage and that yields follow a trendline growth of more than 2 bushels per year.

The Trade War Reality: No Longer Hypothetical

The dairy export landscape has transformed dramatically since March 4, 2025, when President Trump’s administration implemented 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports and a 20% cumulative tariff on Chinese goods. This isn’t theoretical anymore—it’s happening right now.

Mexico, Canada, and China collectively account for nearly 50% of U.S. dairy exports by value, with 2024 export figures showing:

Export Market2024 Value% of Total U.S. Dairy Exports
Mexico$2.47 Billion30.0%
Canada$1.14 Billion13.9%
China$584 Million7.1%

Source: USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, March 2025

The retaliation has been swift and targeted. Canada has imposed 25% tariffs on U.S. dairy products, including yogurt, buttermilk, and other dairy items. China announced 10% tariffs on U.S. dairy products effective March 10, 2025. Mexico’s response remains pending but is expected to target dairy heavily.

Cornell University’s Charles Nicholson projects these tariffs could result in “a staggering $6 billion loss in profits for U.S. dairy farmers over the next four years.” The CME spot markets have already responded with significant declines—cheddar blocks are down 12.5¢ to $1.775/lb, and butter is at $2.345/lb, the lowest since April 2023.

The Silage Surge Playbook: 5 Strategies Top Producers Are Using

  1. Pre-Harvest Pricing: Lock in 60-70% of corn needs now via forward contracts with December corn futures at $4.695/bushel
  2. Alternative Rations: Iowa State trials show beet pulp + distillers grains can replace 30% of corn silage with comparable milk production
  3. On-Farm Storage: 72-hour harvest windows require $8.25-$15/ton custom chopping crews – book now before tariff-related fuel price increases
  4. Dual-Purpose Crops: Brown midrib sorghum yields 22T/acre at 70% corn silage TDN with better drought tolerance
  5. Policy Arbitrage: ECAP payments for farm-grown feed corn – up to $42.91/acre

“The winners will be using corn volatility as a profit center, not just a cost,” says Top 10 dairy consultant Jan Henderson. “I’ve got clients selling December $5 calls to fund heifer development.”

Recent research from Michigan State University shows that early silage corn (April 25-May 10) yields 12-15% more forage than mid-season planting, with higher neutral detergent fiber digestibility, starch, and crude protein concentration. This timing also helps reduce insect feeding and fungal infections that can compromise silage quality.

The Milk Price Mirage: Why Record Highs Could Vanish by June

USDA’s September price hikes look tempting:

ProductPrice Increase (Aug-Sept 2024)
Cheddar Block+16.26¢/lb
Butter+6.90¢/lb
Nonfat Dry+4.45¢/lb

But dig deeper:

  • Milk cow herd down 43,000 head YoY – lowest since 2019
  • Heifer shortages limit expansion until Q2 2025
  • Consumer demand softening – fluid milk sales down 3.8% in Q1 according to USDA ERS March 2025 Dairy Outlook

“These prices are built on scarcity, not strength,” market analyst Luke Waring warns. “When heifers hit the pipeline, we could see $18 milk by Thanksgiving.”

The USDA has adjusted its 2025 milk production forecast downward to 227.2 billion pounds, down 0.8 billion from previous estimates. Meanwhile, the milk-feed ratio sits at 2.10, well below the 2.45 five-year average, indicating continued profitability challenges despite the potential for lower feed costs.

The Silage Quality Factor: Not All Corn Is Created Equal

While quantity gets headlines, quality determines your bottom line. Recent studies from Brazilian researchers demonstrate that gaseous ozone treatment (3.12-4.15%) can significantly improve corn silage quality by reducing mold and yeast populations without compromising nutritional value.

A 2024 study of corn silage from different regions of Southern Brazil revealed dramatic quality variations:

RegionStarch ContentNDFADFTDN
Central South-PR30.68%44.12%25.33%71.2%
North-PR25.21%49.86%29.70%66.8%
West-SC27.45%47.32%27.15%68.9%

Source: Journal of Agricultural Science, June 2024

“These regional differences can translate to a 1.5-2.0 kg difference in daily milk production per cow with the same amount of feed,” notes Dr. Patrick Wood of Ag Methane Advisors. “With feed production and enteric methane emissions accounting for roughly half of the milk’s carbon footprint, silage quality is both an economic and sustainability imperative.”

3 Make-or-Break Moves Before Planting Finishes

  1. Lock Feed Now: December corn <$4.50 is a gift – use options to cap upside while the USDA forecasts average farm prices at $4.20/bushel.
  2. Diversify Exports: Southeast Asian markets ($1.32B in 2024 exports) and Middle East/North Africa ($580M) offer tariff-free alternatives to Mexico, Canada, and China.
  3. Breed for Efficiency: Genomics now predict feed efficiency with 87% accuracy – critical as the milk-feed ratio remains at concerning 2.10 levels

The Bottom Line

This corn tsunami changes everything. The dairies that thrive will use market chaos to lock in structural advantages. Forget “wait and see” – your next 10 moves must happen before the planter wheels stop turning. With 62% of traders reportedly bearish on dairy markets, strategic positioning now could make the difference between survival and thriving in what promises to be a volatile year ahead.

Learn more:

Join the Revolution!

Join over 30,000 successful dairy professionals who rely on Bullvine Daily for their competitive edge. Delivered directly to your inbox each week, our exclusive industry insights help you make smarter decisions while saving precious hours every week. Never miss critical updates on milk production trends, breakthrough technologies, and profit-boosting strategies that top producers are already implementing. Subscribe now to transform your dairy operation’s efficiency and profitability—your future success is just one click away.

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