Dairy product prices rose, advancing for the first time since January and bolstering optimism about the outlook for demand as the world continues to grapple with covid-19.
The GDT price index rose 1.2 per cent from the previous auction three weeks ago. The average price was US$2,969 a tonne, compared with US$2,980 a tonne three weeks ago. Some 20,302 tonnes of product was sold, down from 24,209 tonnes three weeks ago.
"This is the first lift after four consecutive falls, and a better result than had been expected," NZX senior dairy analyst Amy Castleton said in a note. "Market sentiment has still been relatively negative in terms of prices, and the NZX Dairy Derivatives market had been indicating falls across all four main commodities."
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Bank of New Zealand market strategist Jason Wong agreed. "This was a much stronger auction than expected, with our resident cow whisperer Doug Steel looking for a 4 per cent fall in the price index," Wong said in a note. "He's been locked up at home for the past couple of weeks and his gumboots are squeaky clean, so we'll cut him some slack this time."