Asian Dairy Demand Lifts U.S. Milk Prices

International Business Times

Published Mar 10, 2014 09:50AM ET

By Nat Rudarakanchana - Demand for milk within Asian countries, particularly China, has led to spikes in milk prices in the relatively small $1.8 billion milk futures market, reports the Wall Street Journal.

That has translated into higher prices for global buyers of milk contracts, like big dairy processors and companies, but has also led to slightly higher U.S. retail prices for milk. Government data show retail milk prices rose 1.5 percent in January from a year ago, with forecasts for price hikes of 3.5 percent this year.  

Traditionally the U.S. has competed with milk exporter New Zealand as a major player in the global milk trade. But drought in New Zealand has curbed that budding market this year, so U.S. milk expots to Asian countries have risen.

“What we’ve seen in futures over the last two months in the sharpest upward move I’ve ever seen,” said analyst Eric Meyer of brokerage High Ground Trading, to the Journal. He has followed milk futures since 2001.