Friday, July 29, 2022 CapitalPress.com 7 Dairy economist considers the impacts of infl ation, interest rates By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Capital Press File High feed prices continue to restrict milk production. Feed costs limit U.S., global milk production By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Record-high milk prices prompted only a minimal expansion in the U.S. dairy herd, as high feed prices con- tinued to limit milk production in the second quarter. Nonetheless, U.S. cheese stocks continued rising to record highs. U.S. milk production in May was 0.7% lower year over year despite the cow herd increasing by 2,000 head from April. Totaling 9.4 mil- lion head, the U.S. milk cow herd is still short 102,000 head versus a year ago, CoBank reports. “Record-high feed costs, extremely tight heifer inven- tories and high construc- tion costs continue to limit expansion potential,” Tanner Ehmke, CoBank’s lead econ- omist for dairy and specialty crops, said in the report. Although feed costs eased at the end of the quarter, only incremental increases in cow numbers and milk production are expected for the remainder of 2022, he said. Expansions have thus far been limited to states like Texas and South Dakota in the central U.S. where dairies typ- ically grow their own crops and have more control over feed costs. New dairy barn construction is underway in some regions, notably in areas where plant expansions have been announced, he said. “Globally, milk sup- plies remain constrained with Europe and Oceania strug- gling with inclement weather, high feed prices and regula- tory pressures to reduce green- house gas emissions,” he said. Combined milk production in the EU and UK in April was down 0.9% year over year, while New Zealand produc- tion was down 5.6%, he said. “Ongoing cost and regula- tory pressures are expected to limit milk production growth for the remainder of 2022, tightening the world dairy product balance sheet and sending more export business to the U.S.,” he said. On the processing side, milk in the U.S. continued to fl ow to cheese vats in the sec- Piva Rafter P Ranch Custer County, ID 1,410 Acres | $13,000,000 ond quarter with cheese man- ufacturers building inventories to record levels. Cheese pro- duction at the start of the sec- ond quarter also continued its push to record highs, he said. But in a concerning sign of consumers responding to high food prices, American-style cheese disappearance fell 10% year over year in April. Demand for other cheeses inched up only 0.6%. Retail- ers note consumers are also switching to lower-priced and private label cheeses to save on cost, he said. “The sharp slowdown in domestic cheese demand cou- pled with rising production pushed U.S. cheese invento- ries to new record highs, espe- cially with American-style cheeses,” he said. Total cheese stocks were 1.5 billion pounds in May, surging 31 million pounds from the previous month. 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Consumers are already trading down from branded products to private labels or shrinking the size of packages they’re pur- chasing, such as buying a half gallon of milk instead of a full gallon, he said. “We’re already seeing these infl ationary pressures now,” he said. So the question is, What’s going to hap- pen in the dairy industry if the Fed contin- ues raising interest rates aggressively? he said. “The obvious initial impact would be on borrowing costs for dairy farmers and dairy processors. It’s going to become more costly to borrow,” he said. But he stressed the need to do the math on the nominal interest rate versus the real interest rate. “The real interest rate is the nominal interest rate, which is what you are paying your bank, minus infl ation,” he said. For instance, if a farmer is paying 6% on an operating loan and infl ation is 9%, the market is paying the farmer 3% to borrow money. So there’s still an incentive to bor- row, he said. CoBank’s been watching USDA’s monthly milk reports, and the size of the U.S. dairy herd is only increasing incrementally. So there are a lot of things going on to curb expansion, including high feed, labor and material costs, he said. “If we start to see the infl ation numbers tick down and the interest rate numbers come up, then we’re going to see a penalty there for borrowing. So perhaps what we’ll see then is another disincentive to expand,” he said. For processors, another major cost is their cost to carry inventory, and that’s going to increase as borrowing costs go up, he said. “So what they may do there is reduce inventory, and that may show up in tighter stocks for dairy products in the U.S.,” he said. Another part of that equation is consumer behavior, he said. “If the consumer’s going to be slowing down in their purchases, that would have the opposite eff ect perhaps on what is stored in inventory,” he said. 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