DiscoverThe Milk CheckUnderstanding Exports – New Zealand
Understanding Exports – New Zealand

Understanding Exports – New Zealand

Update: 2024-12-11
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Today’s dairy market is global. In our latest episode of The Milk Check, we dive into the New Zealand and Oceania markets to understand how they may impact the U.S. dairy market. Join Jacoby and our two special guests Jo Bills, ag market analyst and director of global Insights at Ever.Ag, and Steve Spencer, managing Director at Ever.Ag as we dive into dairy.








Tight global supplies of skim milk powder and strong demand will likely keep prices high through 2025



New cheese plants in the U.S. market increase Class III supply and may drive cheese prices down and limit powder output, tightening global powder supply



New Zealand enjoys tariff-free access to the Chinese market, but China's economic woes have reduced dairy demand



Lower Chinese demand pushed New Zealand to focus on skim milk powder, butterfat, and cheese




And lots more information on the global dairy market and our predictions 2025. We have a positive outlook for dairy in 2025, but cheese may be our wild card.



Get the market scoop from the Jacoby team, including Ted Jacoby, III, CEO & President, Cheese, Butter & Dry Ingredients; Josh White, Vice President, Dairy Ingredients; and Diego Carvallo, Director of Dry Dairy Ingredient Trading.











Intro (with music):



Welcome to The Milk Check, a T.C. Jacoby & Company podcast where we share market insights and analysis with dairy farmers in mind.



Ted Jacoby, III (T3)



Hello, everybody, and welcome to The Milk Check. This month, we are excited to welcome special guests Joanne Bills and Steve Spencer from Freshagenda to share their thoughts on milk production and dairy demand in Asia, Oceania, and internationally for 2025. Joining us from the Jacoby team are Josh White and Diego Carvallo from our dairy ingredients team. Welcome, everybody, and thank you for joining us today.



Steve Spencer:



Thank you, Ted. It's great to be here. We enjoy these. We've done a few of these, so it's always good fun.



T3:



We're about to enter year two of China's tariff changes regarding New Zealand dairy products and how they are imported into China. For our audience, many of whom are dairy farmers here in the U.S., why don't you give us a quick overview of those changes? Then, we can discuss what that has meant for dairy markets in that region and how it affects dairy prices.



Steve:



In basic terms, New Zealand has tariff-free access to the Chinese market. That was preset for an extended period. They were on a slow rundown of tariffs over a long haul. A few years before that was due, they had a review, and it seemed to be that that was just a little period to push it out a bit longer, and that's in the rearview now. So, we're in a very tariff-free environment for New Zealand exports, which you'd think has freed them up to go wild. The only trouble is China's not a market that is allowing many people to go wild right now because that's come at the same time as China hitting a phase of the second wave after Covid; the second wave lockdowns were much harsher, much longer, much more damaging to the economy and so that's crippled demand for dairy in many parts of the market because spending, consumer spending has been depressed and many things are contributing to that right now and that's still a happening thing.



So, that has freed New Zealand up to grow its share of the market in skim milk, powder, cheese, and butterfat and they've certainly done that at a time when the import volumes are a lot lower. So, we've got to sit back and look at the overall trends in China. We think they're just off the bottom regarding those import trends, but New Zealand has certainly picked up share, and their exports to China are falling.



You could take the story of product by product because the products that China isn't producing or doesn't produce, skim milk, powder, butterfat, cheese, a small production of those, really the trade is probably following the pattern of demand we're seeing in that market.
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Understanding Exports – New Zealand

Understanding Exports – New Zealand

T.C. Jacoby & Co. - Dairy Traders