Global Dairy Trade’s Event 388 (16 Sept 2025) closed with the GDT Price Index down 0.8% versus the previous sale, a weighted average winning price near US$4,041/tonne, and 39,093 tonnes transacted — most of it milk-powder volume. Whole milk powder (WMP) and skim milk powder (SMP) were among the weaker categories, while cheddar showed mixed performance. The auction’s modest fall comes against a backdrop of higher offered volumes and softer demand from several regions, reinforcing a cautious tone across international dairy markets.

Detailed price snapshot (selected, Event 388 / contract summaries)

Industry insight
Two forces are evident. First, supply and seller readiness pushed more powder onto the market this event, increasing total tonnes sold and pressuring prices for milk powders and some milkfat lines. Second, buyer demand remained selective — China and parts of Southeast Asia remain important marginal buyers, but their pull has been uneven, leaving northern hemisphere producers vulnerable to price correction. The result is a market where powder prices are consolidating lower and milkfat (butter/AMF) prices are under particular stress because of regional oversupplies and falling spot demand. This dynamic favors processors with flexible selling channels and storage capacity, while pressuring high-cost exporters.

Short-term forecast (1–3 months)

Why the recent U.S. butter drop makes EU→US exports less viable 


Over the past weeks U.S. butter spot prices (CME / Grade AA) have slipped below US$2.00/lb (~US$4,300/MT), while EU butter reference prices have generally stayed much higher (Vesper’s EU index showed EU butter near €6,700/MT or roughly US$7,700–7,800/MT in late August). That creates a large price spread between EU ex-works and U.S. domestic spot levels. When you add freight, insurance, handling costs — and in many cases import duties or recently discussed tariff actions — the arbitrage for shipping butter from the EU to the U.S. largely disappears. In plain terms: EU suppliers cannot competitively sell into the U.S. unless EU prices fall sharply or the U.S. spot jumps; the recent U.S. butter fall therefore makes EU→US export economics unviable at current levels. This shift reduces one historical outlet for surplus EU butter and increases domestic pressure in Europe to find other markets or build inventories.

Concluding takeaways for traders & exporters

  1. Short hedges / caution: Traders should be cautious on long exposure to WMP/SMP and milkfat until buyer participation stabilises.

  2. Watch buyer hubs: China, North Africa and Southeast Asia remain crucial demand centres — any signs of restocking there could swing prices.

  3. Milkfat mismatch: Keep a close eye on butter spreads (EU vs U.S. vs Oceania) — a persistently wide gap will push EU sellers to pursue alternative buyers or offer deeper discounts, pressuring global milkfat values.

  4. Source : Dairynews7x7 Sep 17th 2025 Look at the results here 

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