The big news of last week was an 8.9% fall in the Global Dairy Trade auction price, after a 5% drop a fortnight previously. This is quite a different beast to the period of falling dairy prices we experienced back in March and April.

That earlier episode was the unsurprising consequence of improving milk production levels in New Zealand and elsewhere – froth coming out of the market, if you will. The latest round of falling milk prices was unanticipated, and is probably more to do with waning demand. The fallout is not limited to dairy alone – log export prices have also fallen sharply in recent months, although meat export prices are still rising.

The culprit here is a marked slowdown in consumer demand in China, exacerbated by a classic inventory cycle. Chinese wholesalers now have more than sufficient stocks on hand to meet relatively-soft demand, and the consequences are rolling up the supply chains for dairy products and logs.

The Chinese economy clearly decelerated in late-2013 and early-2014, following the earlier implementation of restrictive fiscal and monetary policies. China’s economic authorities are now loosening the reins, and the results are starting to show. June quarter Chinese GDP figures, released last week, showed signs of modest recovery in heavy industry and net exports. However, we suspect the consumer sector will be a laggard, and could remain weak for some time. The monthly Westpac-MNI China Consumer Sentiment survey fell sharply in June, and the Chinese housing market is still very soft. So while we are fairly confident that China’s rate of economic growth will accelerate over the course of 2014, a recovery in demand for New Zealand export products may take a bit longer.

All information contained on this website is given in good faith and has been derived from sources believed to be accurate. However, the information is selective and neither Westpac nor any other company in the Westpac Group have verified the information, which may not be complete or accurate for your purposes. Those companies make no representation or warranty of any kind as to the accuracy or completeness of the information. It is general information only and should not be considered as a comprehensive statement on any matter and should not be relied upon as such. Neither Westpac nor any other company in the Westpac Group nor any of their directors, employees and associates guarantees the security of this website, gives any warranty of reliability or accuracy nor accepts any responsibility arising in any other way including by reason of negligence for, errors in, or omissions from, the information on this website and does not accept any liability for any loss or damage, however caused, as a result of any person relying on any information on the website or being unable to access this website. This disclaimer is subject to any applicable contrary provisions of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act and Trade Practices Act.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD retreats to 1.0750, eyes on Fedspeak

EUR/USD retreats to 1.0750, eyes on Fedspeak

EUR/USD stays under modest bearish pressure and trades slightly near 1.0750 on Wednesday. Hawkish comments from Fed officials help the US Dollar stay resilient and don't allow the pair to stage a rebound.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD struggles to hold above 1.2500 ahead of Thursday's BoE event

GBP/USD struggles to hold above 1.2500 ahead of Thursday's BoE event

GBP/USD stays on the back foot and trades in negative territory below 1.2500 after losing nearly 0.5% on Tuesday. The renewed US Dollar strength on hawkish Fed comments weighs on the pair as market focus shifts to the BoE's policy announcements on Thursday.

GBP/USD News

Gold fluctuates in narrow range below $2,320

Gold fluctuates in narrow range below $2,320

After retreating to the $2,310 area early Wednesday, Gold regained its traction and rose toward $2,320. Hawkish tone of Fed policymakers help the US Treasury bond yields edge higher and make it difficult for XAU/USD to gather bullish momentum.

Gold News

SEC vs. Ripple lawsuit sees redacted filing go public, XRP dips to $0.51

SEC vs. Ripple lawsuit sees redacted filing go public, XRP dips to $0.51

Ripple (XRP) dipped to $0.51 low on Wednesday, erasing its gains from earlier this week. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing is now public, in its redacted version. 

Read more

Softer growth, cooler inflation and rate cuts remain on the horizon

Softer growth, cooler inflation and rate cuts remain on the horizon

Economic growth in the US appears to be in solid shape. Although real GDP growth came in well below consensus expectations, the headline miss was mostly the result of larger-than-anticipated drags from trade and inventories.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures