“Is this just a speed bump on the road to expansion of U.S. dairy in the world market?
Or is this a major detour that could cast doubt on the premise that U.S. exports can and will move beyond their recent high of shipping 15.5 percent of U.S. milk production?”
Those were the questions posed by Tom Suber, president of the U.S. Dairy Export Council (USDEC), at a recent USDEC board of directors and membership meeting in Chicago. They are, in fact, questions many commentators have been asking these days, given the international dairy sector’s prolonged market downturn, slow recovery and the U.S. dairy export slump.
Suber’s answer: The fundamentals for long-term U.S. dairy export growth remain in place, but changes in the marketplace require successful U.S. suppliers to intensify their efforts in the years ahead.
“Specifically, what we’ve seen is the situation forecast six years ago in the landmark globalization report authored by Bain and Co. for the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy: a more intensely competitive dairy environment,” Suber said.
That report clearly stated that the U.S. had a finite window of opportunity to better equip itself to compete globally before the squeeze of surging demand against constrained supply brought forth new milk. The study’s authors missed only the source of that milk, predicting the development of low-cost producers like Belarus and Brazil rather than the European Union (EU), but the milk nonetheless has flowed and competition has tightened.
“The window of opportunity is closing on easy market access gains, but the structural changes driving worldwide demand growth are still in place,” Suber said. “The world’s growing middle class will continue to drive dairy demand and export growth, but a narrow supply/demand balance means we will have less sure-fire, almost default opportunities for U.S. success that existed when the EU constrained its own growth.”
Board meeting speaker Tim Hunt, global dairy strategist in Rabobank’s Food and Agribusiness Research Advisory, expressed similar views in his presentation.
“A severe downturn does not necessarily equate to structural change, so don’t rush to that conclusion,” Hunt said. “What we see is a cyclical downturn overlaid by market shocks that really made things nasty.”
Hunt outlined five reasons why Rabobank maintains its positive long-term outlook:
- The world economy is poised to grow 3.5 to 4 percent annually for the next five years – “much higher than population growth, so incomes will rise,” Hunt said.
- There is ample room for consumption growth in emerging markets, even if you compare similar cultures. “As incomes rise, we have a fairly good record of bringing those countries up on a consumption basis,” Hunt said.
- A prolonged period of lower retail prices is going to do enormous good in unlocking consumption growth. “I think we forget how much damage we did to the market through the record pricing of 2013-2014,” Hunt said.
- Emerging markets are still expensive and difficult places to produce milk. They will struggle to keep up with domestic requirements.
- Facing significant environmental, political and other constraints to production, the EU, New Zealand and other surplus regions cannot meet demand growth on their own.
Expect international dairy trade to expand by more than 3 percent annually through 2020, Hunt said. That’s about half the growth rate of the past five years or so, but it’s still a healthy gain that would leave the world looking for another California’s worth of milk between 2014 and 2020.
To get there, however, we need to pull out of the current market imbalance. That requires a greater production response to low prices and the ability to work through an estimated 5 million tons (milk equivalent) in excess inventory in key trading regions globally.
“We believe producers in export regions will apply the supply-side brakes in the first half of 2016,” Hunt said. “We expect international trade to return to expansion in the first half of next year with growth accelerated in the second half.”
Rabobank expects whole milk powder prices midway between $3,000 and $4,000 per ton for the next five years or so.
That being said, it will not be business as usual for U.S. exporters moving forward. From 2010-2014, China practically accounted for all global dairy trade growth. In the future, it will account for about 20 percent, with greater representation from Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Africa and parts of South America.
“Trade growth will be more broadly driven. That will require U.S. suppliers to implement broader marketing strategies,” Hunt said.
“We are in a much better position than 20 years ago when we exported 5 percent of our production, half of which was subsidized by the government,” Suber said. “We have a totally different, more positive set of durable assets today.”
Among those assets are mid-range cost of production, a geographically diverse milk supply with less seasonality than many competitors, ever-better risk management tools, a large internal market for scale and stability, high-productivity herd management and effective supply chain improvement programs, including efforts on sustainability, traceability, food safety and consumer confidence campaigns.
“But despite the progress, the hard work really starts now,” Suber said. “We are in a more competitive environment, which means we will have to bear down to compete – commercially, in regulatory matters and politically.” PD
This article was originally posted in the U.S. Dairy Exporter Blog on Oct. 21, 2015. Subscribe to receive twice-weekly news and information about U.S. dairy exports from USDEC at their website.
The U.S. Dairy Export Council (USDEC) is a non-profit, independent membership organization that represents the global trade interests of U.S. dairy producers, proprietary processors and cooperatives, ingredient suppliers and export traders. Its mission is to enhance U.S. global competitiveness and assist the U.S. industry to increase its global dairy ingredient sales and exports of U.S. dairy products. USDEC programs and activities are supported by the dairy checkoff program, with additional funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service and from membership dues. For more information, visit their website.