Markets resilient, farmers hopeful
OPINION: The global dairy market continues to show resilience, and farmers remain cautiously optimistic as we move into the latter half of 2025.
The treasury is ruling out an early end to low dairy prices.
Speaking to parliament’s finance and expenditure select committee last week, the secretary for the Treasury, Gabriel Makhlouf, predicted dairy prices would stay lower for longer. This conflicts with a forecast a few days ago by MPI that the farmgate milk price for the year to May 2016 would be $5.62/kgMS; Fonterra is forecasting a milk price of $5.25/kgMS.
Makhlouf told the committee that dairy prices have fallen at each of the five Global Dairy Trade auctions since the treasury’s forecasts were finalised for the Budget Economic and Fiscal Update. He says Fonterra has twice revised downwards its farmgate milk price for the season just finished.
“While we anticipated continuing weakness in dairy prices in our forecasts, there is now a greater risk that prices could take longer to pick up, with the recovery starting later this year or in early 2016, rather than in the second half of this year as anticipated.”
Makhlouf says while this may not affect production levels and economic activity, it would lower the terms of trade and slow growth in the total dollar value of goods and services.
The current low dairy prices have been offset to some degree by shifts in the exchange rate, Makhlouf points out. The NZ$ has depreciated against the US$, largely reflecting the improving outlook for the US economy and in expectation that interest rates will soon rise there, and monetary policy ease in NZ.
The Coalition Government will need the support of at least one opposition party to ratify the free trade deal with India.
Primary sector leaders have welcomed the announcement of a Free Trade Agreement between India and New Zealand.
At Pāmu’s Kepler Farm in Manapouri, mating has wrapped up at the across-breed Beef Progeny Test.
More than 150 people turned up at Parliament recently to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ).
Biosecurity New Zealand says Kiwis should continue to keep an eye out for yellow-legged hornets (Vespa velutina) over the holiday season.
Fonterra has slashed another 50c off its milk price forecast as global milk flows shows no sign of easing.