Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
You're listening to a podcast from News Talk ZEDB. Follow
this and our wide range of podcast now on iHeartRadio,
The Rural Report on Hither Do to See Allan Drive,
Jamie McKay's with Us host of the Country Jamie good Evening. Gooday, Ryan,
So is a nine dollar milk price on the cards
for twenty five twenty six? What do we think?
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Well, it's not what I think or you really, Ryan,
it's probably what the experts think. And having just read
and reviewed the Rabobank Q four Global Dairy Quarterly Report,
a one sentence hit me right between the eyes. This
was authored, by the way, by Emma Higgins, who's their
senior ag analyst. She wrote, there is elevated risk that
(00:53):
the farm gate milk price moves lower across the course
of the season season, which would mean that the final
season payout lands around the nine dollars per kilogram of
milk solid mark. So that's not a great number when
we start the season with a ten dollar fore cast.
Of course, Fonterra has since trimmed that to nine dollars fifty.
(01:15):
But if it gets down to nine dollars, well, you know,
the margins are getting a bit skinnier there because yesterday
Dairy and Z came out with their econ tracker, which
is their tool for working out how much it costs
to produce milk, and they're saying the break even price
is eight fifty, So you know, look, ten dollars is great,
Nine dollars fifty is okay. Nine dollars jury's out a
(01:37):
wee bit on that one. Still got a long way
to go. But the reason all this has happened, Ryan,
and this is in the Global Dairy quarterly report as well,
is because of stunning that's the word they've used, stunning
global milk production growth across the second half of twenty
twenty five right around the world, the EU and e
K and UK should I say, have posted their strongest
(01:59):
growth since twenty seventeen. For the month of October, US
milk flows posted their fifth consecutive month of rates over
three percent. Here in New Zealand, we're ticking along at
about three point four percent ahead of where we were
last year. The Big Seven that's the EU, the US, US, Australia, Brazil,
(02:21):
Argentina and Uruguay forecast to finish twenty twenty five up
two point two percent year on year. So the guts
of it all, Ryan, is, you know, the milk price
has gone up. People around the world, especially in places
like the States where grain prices are low, have just
moved their production from feeding stuff to feeding other stuff,
(02:42):
basically dairy cows, and therein lies the.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Problem and then all the milk comes on tat. Now
our national lamcrop for this season is up a bit
on the previous Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
This is sort of a this is a really good
news story, to be honest, Ryan, If you remember back
and you're far too young to remember back to the
nineteen eighties, but when Rob Muldoon was in power and
we had farming subsidies on a national sheep flock peaked
at about over seventy million. Now we've got about twenty
(03:14):
three million, twenty three or twenty four million, so we're
well more than half. But the national lamb crop is
going to be nineteen point sixty six million according to
the Beef and Lamb New Zealand latest lamb crop report.
That's up about two hundred thousand lambs on last season.
But the good news part of the story is a
the lambing percentage has improved a whole lot one hundred
(03:37):
and thirty one point one percent average across the country.
That's amazing when you consider some of the land that
they're farming on with these sheep sheep farms, and that's
off the back of one point nine percent reduction and
breeding new numbers. So the number of lambs processed is
probably going to be in line with last year, which
was down a million on the year before. And part
(03:59):
of the reason for that is even though we've got
more lambs, we're only going to process about the same amount.
That's because some of those lambs born are going to
be retained as you lambs to rebuild the breeding flock.
Global lamb supply remains constrained. They're supported by an expected
five point eight percent reduction in Australian lamb export availability
(04:22):
and continued low New Zealand supply. The guts of all
this is that farm gate prices are at historically high
levels and probably will remain there at least for this season.
Here's the final number for you. Ryan lamb is now
eleven dollars a kilo milk or the milk price could
(04:43):
be as low as nine dollars a kilo. It's not
often that lamb exceeds deary, it's a while since we've
seen that, so watch the.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Space certainly will Jamie, thank you for that.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
Jamie McKay, Host of the Country here on News Talk SeeDB.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
For more from News Talk said B, listen live on
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