August 23, 2010
Fonterra keeps milk payout as dairy prices improve
The weather setbacks which have sent grain market soaring may revive flagging dairy prices, Fonterra said, as it ditched plans to cut its forecast for milk price payments to farmers.
Henry van de Heyden, the cooperative's chairman, said there were "a number of factors signalling a potential improvement in dairy markets later in the year", after a fall of one-quarter in milk prices since April.
"We are seeing signs of potential strengthening of international prices further into the season," he said.
Fonterra, the world's biggest dairy group, cited the damage to agricultural hopes caused by dry weather in Europe and Russia, and floods in China and Pakistan, while acknowledging that the extent of the impact on dairy producers was "unknown".
Europe is the world's biggest milk producer, while China and Russia are significant importers.
Andrew Ferrier, the Fonterra chief executive, said that the rise in grain prices, caused in particular by Russia's ban on grain exports, could lend support to dairy prices.
Higher feed costs could slow the recovery in dairy production from a low during the global recession, with output in the major producing countries returning to growth in May.
Expectations of further increases in output, at a time when hopes for the global economic revival are waning, have been cited as a significant factor in the sharp decline of milk prices since the spring.
"The fundamentals for global markets continue to point to balanced supply and demand," Ferrier added.
The comments came as Fonterra, which warned two weeks ago it may cut its forecast milk payout to its farmers for 2010-11, kept the estimate for the payment unchanged at NZD6.60 (US$4.67) per kilogramme of milk solids.
Members will receive a further payout, pegged at NZD0.30-0.50 (US$0.21-$0.35) per kilogramme of milk solids, from the cooperative's other operations.










