Business Standard

Higher global prices to help dairy firms

- DILIP KUMAR JHA Mumbai, 12 June

Arise in the price of value added products such as cheese, butter and skimmed milk powder (SMP) is set to help dairy companies’ revenue via higher export in the next two quarters.

Data compiled by the Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on of the United Nations show its Dairy Price Index at 215.2 points in May, up 11 points (5.5 per cent) from April and the fourth month in a row for the index rising, primarily due to tight supplies from New Zealand. The index value was 11.5 per cent higher than in May 2017, though 22 per cent below the peak in February 2014.

While prices of dairy products remained almost stagnant in India, these "have surged in the internatio­nal markets of late, due to lower supply. Indian companies can boost shipments to fetch better realisatio­n”, says R S Sodhi, managing director, Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation, producer of the Amul brand.

White butter, for example, is ~250 a kg here and ~380-390 a kg ($5,850 a tonne) in internatio­nal markets). Cheese prices abroad are quoted at $6,800 a tonne (~457 a kg), compared to less than ~400 a kg in India.

However, it is the other way round for SMP, the most popular dairy product in the export segment. It is ~120-125 a kg in the internatio­nal market, as against ~140 a kg here.

“Indian dairy exporters have created a trust and confidence in the global markets for their products, which is set to yield premiums even for SMP over their export from other competing countries. India exports its dairy products primarily to the Middle East and Russia, beside other countries,” said Sodhi (another destinatio­n is America).

Though small yet, export of dairy products rose to $185.5 million (48,039 tonnes) in 2017-18 from $135.3 mn (39,168 tonnes) a year before.

“Milk procuremen­t prices corrected in the March quarter from their peak in the first quarter (AprilJune. These are expected to stabilise at lower levels for next three to four months, considerin­g lower fodder prices and a decline in global SMP prices. We expect lower input prices to aid margin expansion,” said Aniruddha Joshi, an analyst with ICICI Securities while referring to Parag Milks’ performanc­e.

Milk prices have declined 25.5 per cent and are expected to remain benign, given SMP inventory and expectatio­n of a normal monsoon. SMP’s price in the March quarter was down 23.6 per cent from a year before.

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 ?? Compiled by BS Research Bureau Source: APEDA (DGCIS) ??
Compiled by BS Research Bureau Source: APEDA (DGCIS)

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