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Sunday, 07/23/2017 2:58:24 PM

Sunday, July 23, 2017 2:58:24 PM

Post# of 129193
Great news for incoming company taking over TBEV...

Another reason why 1 BILLION TBEV shorted shares the past two sessions can't be happy..

Big week ahead, expect filings and more updates.

Export picture brightens for U.S. dairy

Published on June 13, 2017


Lower milk production in other exporting countries and higher world prices for dairy products — which make U.S. products more competitive — are giving U.S. exporters better leverage in world markets.

U.S. dairy exports in April topped year-ago levels for the 11th consecutive month, with gains in most product categories and to most major destinations, according to the latest U.S. Dairy Export Council report.

Exporters shipped 162,441 tons of milk powder, cheese, butterfat, whey and lactose in April, up 12 percent from a year ago. Those sales totaled $461 million, up 23 percent from April 2016.

The two main categories driving the increase are nonfat dry milk/skim milk powders and whey, said Alan Levitt, USDEC market analyst.

The top market was Mexico, which imported $103.2 million in U.S. dairy products in April, up 9 percent from a year earlier. Southeast Asia followed, with sales 23 percent higher to $68.3 million. Sales to Canada grew 2 percent to $53.1 million, and sales to China were up 91 percent to $47.7 million.


Some of the large increases are due to weak comparables in 2016, Levitt said.

“We’re still not back up to where we were in 2014 when sales peaked,” he said.

U.S. cheese exports have picked up lately, increasing 15 percent from January through April, and that’s certainly a positive. Fluid milk shipments are up 14 percent in the same time period, he said.
Total exports, excluding milk and cream, were up 13 percent in volume to 624.3 million metric tons and 18 percent in value to $1.8 billion from January through April.

Part of the reason for the gains is that world prices increased in the second half of 2016, and U.S. prices have become more competitive. Those increased prices are due to significant reductions in milk production in other countries. In the fourth quarter of 2016, milk production was down 3.4 percent in the EU, 7.6 percent in Australia and 4.3 percent in New Zealand, Levitt said.

“So our competitors haven’t had as much (product) to sell. The U.S. is the only exporter increasing production over the last year and a half,” he said.

U.S. milk production was up 2.5 percent in the last quarter of 2016, he said.