Friday, August 27, 2021 CapitalPress.com 5 Wheat tops $10 a bushel, but will it stay that high? By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press USDA dairy assistance addresses Class I shortfall By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Aid for dairy operators hurt by the quirky milk mar- ket caused by a COVID-19 relief program leaves out many farmers, a dairy orga- nization says. USDA will provide about $350 million in assis- tance to dairy producers in federal marketing orders who received lower pay- ments for their milk due to market abnormalities caused by the pandemic. Under the Pandemic Market Volatility Assis- tance Program, USDA will reimburse producers on rev- enue losses on the sale of fl uid milk — Class I milk — on 80% of the revenue diff erence between a newer pricing formula for that milk and the previous formula. The assistance addresses an unforeseen conse- quence of the new formula caused by pandemic-re- lated government purchases of cheese in its food box program. The formula’s “mover” sets the Class I base price to which a location diff er- ential is added. The calcu- lation for the mover was changed in 2019 to provide better risk management for fl uid milk processors. But that change proved costly to dairy farmers in the pan- demic’s wildly abnormal markets. The previous mover was calculated as the “higher of” the advance prices for Class III (milk for cheese) and Class IV (milk for but- ter and powder). It was changed to the average of the Class III and Class IV prices plus 74 cents per hundredweight, which refl ected the average diff erence of the Class III and Class IV prices and the higher of the two. The change was meant to be revenue-neutral, with equity among market par- ticipants a stated goal. It was until July 2020, when Class III milk prices soared, driven by government pur- chases of cheese. The signifi cant gap between Class III and Class IV prices resulted in a lower average price. Thus the Class I mover was lower than it would Dairy aid raises questions By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Milk pricing is complex to start with. Adding gov- ernment assistance to the mix raises the bar. USDA announced this week it will reimburse milk producers in federal marketing orders on lost revenue on sales of milk for fl uid consumption — Class I milk — during the pandemic. The payments will be based on monthly sales from July through December 2020 and are capped at 5 million pounds of annual milk production. The reimbursement is for 80% of the revenue diff er- ence between what that milk sold for under a change in the pricing formula that began in May 2019 and what it would have sold for under the previous formula. USDA’s payment rate will vary by region based on actual losses on pooled milk. USDA will make pay- ments to independent handlers and cooperatives, which will distribute the money to their dairy producers. But it’s not so simple, especially considering the production cap. Milk for all utilization in federal orders is pooled, and milk producers in the pool are paid a blend price based on the prices for and volumes of milk in each uti- lization — such as fl uid, cheese or powder. Sales of fl uid milk contribute to that blend price. So reimbursement payments will be shared by producers within the pool — but there are caveats. Peter Vitaliano, chief economist at the National Dairy Producers Federation, said he’d like to see more detail from USDA. But conceptually, the total payments to each fed- eral order pool for each of the months July through December 2020 — during which the current and pre- vious Class I movers were so divergent — can be cal- culated, he said. “And it will refl ect the diff erence between the respective total contributions of Class I skim milk to each pool each month and, therefore, the same diff er- ence in the uniform statistical (blend) price paid to pro- ducers from each pool each month, based on their indi- vidual pooled milk volumes,” he said. Producers whose milk was depooled from any of the orders during any of the six months will not get payments, he said. “Total cumulative payments to each producer will be added up for each month and payments stopped to each producer when their cumulative total reaches payment for 5 million pounds,” he said. It will make a diff erence for each producer whose total payment is limited by the production cap if the calculation is made sequentially from July to Decem- ber or if it is based on an average over all six months, he said. have been previously, and farmers lost money on Class I milk. Revenue from that milk is shared in federal order pools, which market milk for diff erent uses. The newly announced assistance program will pay 80% of the revenue loss to dairy farmers on an annual production of up to 5 million pounds of milk on fl uid milk sales from July through December 2020. The payment cap rep- resents the annual produc- tion of 210 cows in 2020, according to USDA data. While the 5 million pounds of annual production covers the majority of dairies in the U.S., many in the West have signifi cantly more cows and higher production. WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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The price of soft white winter wheat has rocketed past $10 per bushel in the past week, but marketing experts dis- agree on whether it will remain that high. The price of soft white wheat ranged from $9.80 to $10.25 per bushel Aug. 17 on the Portland market. “It really depends on what Austra- lia does,” said Dan Steiner, grains mer- chant at Morrow County Grain Growers in Lexington, Ore. “The USDA thinks the Pacifi c North- west lost 100 million bushels worth of production” this year because of the drought, Steiner said. “Australia found it. They’re on track right now for what could be a huge crop.” Australia had a record wheat crop of 1.2 billion bushels last year. This year’s crop is estimated at 1.1 billion bushels. That nation grows hard and soft vari- eties and exports up to 75% of its total production, according to the Australian Export Grains Innovation Center. USDA’s Aug. 12 World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report projected U.S. soft white wheat pro- duction this year would be 214 million bushels, down 29% from 302 million bushels last year. USDA projections translate into about a 93.2 million bushel crop for Washing- ton state, the smallest since 1973, said Glen Squires, CEO of the Washington Grain Commission. The state’s 2020 crop was 165.6 million bushels, according to the commission. “Tighter supplies from reduced pro- duction certainly adds to price strength relative to demand,” Squires said. “With constrained supply this year due to tight stock carryover plus the reduction in production with the drought impacts, we are seeing the strength of that price,” said Amanda Hoey, Oregon Wheat CEO, adding that higher prices are “important for producers in this year of low production.” Australia could still experience pro- duction problems, Steiner said. “If they have a hiccup, if they have hot weather come in, if it quits rain- ing, or anything like that, we’re cer- tainly, certainly going to go higher,” he said. “If Australia stumbles ... we could be at $15 in very short fashion.” However, soft white wheat prices would have Dan Steiner a tough time rallying any higher if Australia’s crop continues at its current pace, Steiner said. At the same time, the market is short enough that Steiner doesn’t see a lot of downside for prices. Another expert believes prices won’t remain at their current levels for long. Omaha, Neb., market analyst Darin Newsom expects prices to snap back lower, like a rubber band. The market could drop by a dollar, he said. “We did go to a new contract high late last week,” he said. “That normally doesn’t last long. When that rubber band breaks, it snaps back to its base, which is fundamentals, and so we see the mar- ket sell off .” Fundamentals include acres planted, yield and demand. Newsom wants to see them get more bullish, prompting inves- tors to believe the market will go higher. The export market could heat up this year if — “and it’s a huge asterisk” — USDA projections about a drop in global wheat production prove correct. Newsom said he is not yet convinced supplies are tighter, except for high-pro- tein hard red spring wheat. “Markets are going to be searching for some protein wheat, anything right now,” he said, adding that “there’s just not going to be a lot of spring wheat, in Canada or the U.S.” Soft white winter wheat discounts for high protein due to heat stress will likely remain, he said, since higher pro- tein isn’t as desirable for products made using that particular wheat class. Steiner estimates the Pacifi c North- west lost 30% to 50% of its wheat pro- duction this year due to heat and drought, depending on the area. The market will fi gure out a way to use any wheat, he said, even the wheat with higher protein caused by heat stress. “Right now they max out discounts at 60 cents,” he said. “You’re looking at $9.40 wheat. What’s wrong with $9.40 wheat? That’s a good number.”