"Dairy prices are now 17.7 per cent below the 2018 peak back in May and 6.2 per cent lower year-to-date," he says.
Global dairy products are priced in US dollars and the New Zealand dollar has been trending higher against the greenback since early November.
The kiwi gained more than 2 per cent against the US dollar last week, taking its gains for November so far to more than 5.5 per cent, although it is still down more than 3 per cent from where it began this year.
The kiwi's rise has been fuelled in part by the unexpected fall in the unemployment rate to 3.9 per cent in the September quarter, a more than 10-year low. Economists had expected either a steady rate of 4.5 per cent or a slightly higher outcome.
Lister says most people are becoming more convinced that Fonterra won't make its current forecast.
"It's hard to see a big turn-around in the trend the trend this week – the most we can probably hope for is some stability – they've got a long way to go to get back to where they were."
Still, "anything that starts with a six is probably satisfactory, but obviously higher would be better."
Usually, New Zealand dollar strength means the US dollar is retreating, but not at the moment – the greenback is still rising. It's just that the New Zealand dollar has been rising even more.
One factor fuelling the US dollar's rise this year has been expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep raising interest rates as the US economy continues to perform strongly.
However, the Fed's vice chair, Richard Clarida, put a little spoke in that wheel last week when he said that monetary policy is getting closer to a neutral level.
Lister says that, despite this, he still expects the Fed to raise interest rates again in December.
Market pricing still backs this view with a December hike 68 per cent priced into the markets, although that's down from 75 percent a week ago.
The Fed is "very data-driven," Lister says, and data last week showed inflation running at an annual pace of 2.5 per cent and that retail sales rose 0.8 per cent in October, beating forecasts for a 0.5 per cent increase.
But this sort of data is all backward looking.
"When you look at the company reporting season and the outlook statements, there's a little more caution creeping in," Lister says.
"There's a lot of talk about things slowing down and the impact of tariffs. I think that's why the share market's been as jumpy as it is."
New Zealand's benchmark NZX 50 Index shed 1.4 per cent last week, taking its quarter-to-date losses to almost 6 per cent, although it is still 4.9 per cent higher than it began 2018.
The broad measure of the US stock market, the S&P 500 Index, fell 1.6 per cent last week.
Yet another spanner in the works of the strong economic growth story in the US is that West Texas Intermediate crude oil tumbled another 5.3 per cent last week, the sixth consecutive week of declines, taking losses in that period to more than 25 per cent.
"Why it's worrying is because we've got all these other things to worry about. When people see the price of oil tanking 25 per cent in the space of a few weeks, it's another thing that spooks the market," Lister says.
- BusinessDesk