By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Some state dairy producers have been given the
opportunity to manage risk through cost share participation
in the milk futures market. Walthall
County dairy farmers have a unique opportunity to enter the
dairy futures market at reduced costs through the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Dairy Options Pilot Program.
DOPP pays 80 percent of the premium and part of the
brokerage fees for qualified participants who buy "put
options" in the milk futures market. Put options are bought
to establish or lock in the minimum price a producer will
receive for milk at a selected future date. Lamar
Adams, Walthall County agent with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said eight of the county's
62 dairy producers have been trained in dairy futures
marketing. More training will be done in the next few
weeks. "Producer
prices for milk are extremely volatile and follow a seasonal
pattern," Adams said. "Over the last few years, we've seen
some pretty severe increases and decreases, so anything a
dairy farmer can do to try to ensure stability in milk
income should be a benefit." One way
to introduce price stability is through put options on milk
futures contracts. "The
intent is not to guarantee a higher price for that milk but
to buy an insurance policy against falling milk prices,"
Adams said. "You pay a premium to guarantee a minimum
price." Put
options are offered on Class III milk, used primarily for
cheese, and Class IV, used primarily for butter and milk
powder. By locking in a minimum price, put options protect
producers from downward price movements, but allow producers
to sell at higher prices with no penalty if prices
increase. Bill
Herndon, Extension agricultural economist, said put options
are available in 25 cent increments, and option contracts
can be bought in either 100,000 or 200,000 pound units.
Premium fees fluctuate moment to moment, as does the futures
price and the cash price. Dairy producers must consider
these and other factors when deciding whether to buy a put
option and at what price. For
example, to use a put option price of $15.50 on Class III
milk for September, producers must first estimate the basis,
which is defined as the difference between what they expect
the cash and futures prices to be at a particular time. If
the basis is $1.50, add this to the $15.50 desired price for
a total of $17. Then
subtract September's premium of 38 cents a hundredweight,
bringing the locked in price to $16.62, which is the minimum
price the producer locks in with this put option example.
Premium fees on a 100,000 pound contract under this scenario
are $380 and brokerage fees usually are about $50 in
Mississippi. "DOPP
pays 80 percent of the premium and a maximum of $30 in
brokerage fees," Herndon said. "In this example, USDA would
pay $334 and the farmer would pay $96 to assure a minimum
milk sale price in September of $16.62 a
hundredweight." The
DOPP program will cost share a maximum of either 600,000 of
pounds of milk per producer or the producer's selected six
consecutive months of production, whichever is less.
Producers can still deal in the futures market after
reaching the cap, but without cost share assistance from the
USDA. Herndon
said USDA is offering the program through its Risk
Management Agency as an educational outreach for dairy
producers on price risk management. Milk futures are
available on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and were first
offered in 1995. "DOPP
is a demonstration program to get farmers introduced to the
milk futures market," Herndon said. "It helps defray most of
the cost of getting acquainted with this risk management
alternative." To take
part in DOPP, dairy farmers must first be located within a
participating county. Walthall County was the only county
placed in the program in December, and Adams said USDA
expects to add more Mississippi counties next
year. Currently,
the program last for one year, but Adams said he expects it
to be extended. "Farmers
have been marketing grain and other crops for years in the
futures market, but until recently, there was no futures
market for dairy products," Adams said. "Since it's
relatively new, most dairy producers haven't forward
marketed any products, so USDA is offering this program to
introduce them to this risk management tool." Released:
Aug. 20, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Program helps
dairy farmers
learn futures
For more information, contact: Lamar Adams, (601)
876-4021
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:27:58
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010820.html
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