Milk prices |
Milk prices are to "start going up" – but not significantly,
at least for the first half of the year, US dairy giant Dean Foods said, although
the outlook failed to prevent a sharp drop in its shares.
Gregg Tanner, the chief executive at the biggest US dairy
processor, said that the milk price - as measured by the Class 1 Mover
benchmark for liquid milk - "is going to start going up, obviously, from where
it's at now.
"But we don't see [the rise] being significant
"What we're seeing here is that through the first half of
the year we expect [milk prices] to be relatively benign."
'China seems well supplied'
Mr Tanner flagged the dent to prices from resilient
production, at a time of curtailed purchases by Russia, which has imposed sanctions
against many Western exporting nations, and China.
"China seems to remain well supplied, as its greater-than-2%,
year-over-year milk supply growth stabilises and demand holds against the backdrop
of lacklustre economic performance," Mr Tanner told investors.
Meanwhile, output volumes are being supported by the rise in
European Union production, running at some 5% year on year, following the removal
in April of output quotas.
"This is meaningful when one considers that the overall size
of the European dairy production is over 1.5 times larger than that of the US
and approximately seven times larger than that of New Zealand," the top milk-exporting
country.
"These supply-and-demand factors should contribute to a
relatively benign dairy commodity environment over the short term," from a milk
buyer's perspective.
'Slow recovery in prices'
The comments tally with the consensus that a notable
recovery in dairy prices is unlikely until at least 2016.
Separately on Monday, National Australia Bank said that "looking
to the coming year, we see a slow recovery in global prices, with moderately
higher Chinese demand but continued strength in global supply".
And they came as Dean Foods unveiled a more than tripling in
earnings for the October-to-December quarter, to $18.84m, from $5.28m a year
before.
While revenues fell by 15.5% to $2.02bn, a reflection of
weaker retail milk prices, the impact was cushioned by the lower raw material
costs.
Ahead of forecasts
On an underlying basis, earnings came in at $0.36 a share, a
little ahead of the $0.34-a-share result expected by analysts, according to
FactSet.
And the group forecast earnings hitting $0.32-0.42 a share
in the current, January-to-March quarter, at least matching the market
consensus, and potentially improving on the underling result of $0.33 a share
reported for the same period last year.
"With the continuation of commercial and brand initiatives,
diligent cost focus, and an overall favourable commodity environment, we expect
our operating and financial momentum to continue," Mr Tanner said.
Margin pressure
Nonetheless, Dean Foods shares tumbled 7.9% to $18.89 in
midday deals in New York.
The group acknowledged pressure on its margins, as retail
prices fell at a "heightened rate" compared with milk costs.
"The margin over milk decreased from $1.54 per gallon in the
July-to-September quarter to $1.48 per gallon in the October-to-December
quarter," Mr Tanner said.
"We recognise these levels of margin over milk have not been
seen since 2014.
"However, we do not believe this is indicative of material
pricing tensions within the marketplace," he added.
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