Why would anyone sell butter at a 60% loss? Because destroying farms is more profitable than butter.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: That cheap butter at your store? Retailers lose $8 per pound selling it—intentionally. Four chains controlling 85% of Germany’s grocery market use algorithms that synchronize prices without human intervention, accepting dairy losses to profit from everything else in your cart. This strategy has already eliminated 28,000 German dairy farms, with 2,800 more exiting annually. By 2030, only 18,000 of today’s 47,000 farms will remain—a 60% collapse. The same algorithmic playbook is now hitting Wisconsin, California, and even Canada’s protected market. Farmers face a stark choice: adapt through diversification and collective action, or become casualties of the algorithm economy.

You know that moment when you see a price that just doesn’t make sense? I had one of those last month in Bavaria, standing in a Lidl looking at butter on promotional pricing—€1.39 for a 250-gram pack.
Now, I’ve been tracking dairy economics for about 25 years, and this stopped me cold. Because when you run the numbers… well, let me walk you through what I discovered.
THE BREAKDOWN: Where €1.39 Butter Really Comes From

- €11.50 – Raw milk cost (21.5 kg milk × €0.535/kg)
- €1.25 – Processing (energy, labor, packaging)
- €0.95 – Logistics & distribution
- €13.70 – Total actual cost per kilogram
- €5.56 – Retail selling price per kilogram
- €8.14 – Loss per kilogram
The Math That Started This Conversation
So here’s what we all know—it takes about 21.5 kilograms of milk to make a kilogram of butter. Basic dairy conversion, right? The German Farmers’ Association reported in September that Bavarian producers were getting between €0.53 and €0.54 per kilo for their milk. Pretty standard for the region this time of year.
Quick math tells you that’s €11.50 per kilogram of butter in raw milk. Just the milk, nothing else.
But here’s where it gets interesting. I’ve been talking with folks in processing, and German processor associations are reporting their members face costs anywhere from €1.15 to €1.35 per kilogram—that’s energy, labor, packaging, the whole nine yards. Add in transportation and warehousing, and you’re looking at a total cost of around €13.70 per kilogram of butter. Minimum.
That promotional price at Lidl? Works out to €5.56 per kilogram.
That’s more than an €8 loss per kilo, folks. And this isn’t a one-off mistake—this is happening across Germany right now.

What I’ve found is that when you dig into the market structure—and the Bundeskartellamt, Germany’s federal cartel office, has documented this thoroughly—you see that four retail chains control about 85% of the German food market. We’re talking Edeka, Rewe, the Schwarz Group (they run Lidl and Kaufland), and Aldi. When you’ve got that kind of concentration… well, the dynamics change completely.
How Retail Pricing Actually Works These Days
This builds on something we’ve all been noticing—pricing isn’t what it used to be. These retailers are now using algorithmic systems —computer programs that monitor competitor prices and adjust automatically. The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority has done some fascinating work documenting this.
What happens—and university researchers at places like MIT and Carnegie Mellon have tracked this in real time—is pretty remarkable. When Lidl’s system sees Aldi drop butter to a certain price, it automatically matches or beats it. No meetings, no phone calls. Within 48 hours, sometimes less, all four major chains end up at basically the same price.
And here’s the kicker: this is completely legal under EU competition law. Article 101 requires explicit agreement for a violation, and these algorithms… they’re just responding to market conditions. Game theorists call it finding the Nash equilibrium—basically, the point where nobody benefits from changing their strategy alone.
But what’s this mean for us as dairy producers? As a processor recently told me, “We’re not really negotiating with buyers anymore. We’re dealing with machines programmed to optimize the entire shopping basket, not individual products like milk or butter.”
The Cross-Subsidization Strategy
So how can retailers lose €8 per kilo of butter and still stay in business? Well, that’s where it gets clever—and honestly, a bit frustrating if you’re on the production side.

Market research firms like GfK have studied this extensively. When shoppers come for that cheap butter, they don’t leave with just butter. The whole shopping trip tells a different story.
Those dairy products bringing people in the door? They’re losing money. But look at what else goes in the cart. Private-label products—and industry benchmarking suggests these run at much higher margins. Store-brand pasta might hit margins of 40-45%. Their cheese? Often 50% or more. Those fresh-baked items that smell so good when you walk in? We’re talking 50-60% margins, easy.
And those middle-aisle specials Aldi and Lidl are famous for—the tools, seasonal items, random clothing? Import data suggests those can run 60-70% margins.
A typical €40 shopping trip might lose a bit on dairy but generate €15-20 in overall gross profit. The dairy loss? It’s basically their customer acquisition cost.
What really gets me—and I hear this from producers all the time—is that retailers have thousands of products to balance. We’ve got milk. When our single product gets priced below production cost, we can’t make it up by selling garden tools or Christmas decorations.
What This Means for the Next Generation
Let me share something that really brings this home. I recently spoke with a Bavarian producer—I’ll call him Johann to respect his privacy—who runs about 85 cows near Rosenheim. Good operation, been in the family for four generations.
His son was planning to come back after finishing his ag degree. “Was” being the key word.
German Farmers’ Association data shows that when milk prices drop even €0.02 to €0.03 per kilogram, operations of his size can see income swings of €35,000 to €45,000 annually. For Johann, that recent price movement? It eliminated the salary he’d planned for his son.
The kid’s studying engineering in Munich now. Can’t say I blame him.
What we’re seeing across Germany matches this perfectly. Federal statistics show they’re down to 46,849 dairy farms—that’s from about 75,000 just ten years ago. Average farmer age has crept past 52. And the Thünen Institute’s research shows that only about 37% have identified successors.

When your margins compress below 7%—and many German operations are there right now—succession planning basically stops. Young people see their parents dealing with transition cow challenges, managing butterfat levels through these hot summers, working 70-hour weeks during calving season… all for marginal returns. They find other paths. And honestly? Who can blame them?
Two Paths Forward
Looking at where this could go by 2030, I see two pretty distinct scenarios developing.
If Current Trends Continue
Based on German federal statistics showing about 2,800 farms leaving each year, we’re looking at 18,000 to 20,000 dairy farms by 2030. That’s a 60% drop from today.
Average herd size would probably expand to 250-300 cows. Different world entirely—you’d need parlors built for that scale, different fresh cow protocols, probably shift from component feeding to TMR systems… it’s a fundamental operational change.
And here’s what concerns me: remember 2022? During those supply chain disruptions, consumer price monitoring showed German butter hitting €2.19 to €2.49 per pack in some areas. Nearly double today’s promotional prices.
Rabobank’s 2025 dairy outlook makes a solid point here—every farm that exits permanently reduces the system’s ability to respond to shocks. When the next crisis hits, whether it’s drought affecting forage quality or another geopolitical disruption, the system won’t have the capacity to respond. Prices won’t just increase—they’ll spike hard.
If Reforms Take Hold
Now, there’s another path, and we’re seeing pieces of it work in Spain and France.
Both countries introduced cost-based pricing regulations—Spain in 2013, France in 2018. According to Eurostat data, yes, their dairy prices run 8-12% higher than Germany’s. But their farm exit rates? Less than half of Germany’s, according to their ag ministries.
I’ve talked with French producers at conferences, and while it’s not perfect, they can at least plan. They know costs will be covered plus a small margin. That lets them invest—better cooling systems for heat stress, improved transition cow facilities, things that pay off long-term.
What’s encouraging is that the French Young Farmers Association reports over 1,200 new dairy operations started in 2024. Not huge numbers, but it’s growth versus decline. That matters.
What’s Actually Working Out There
After talking with producers across Europe and North America, here’s what I’m seeing work in practice.
For Younger Operations with Succession Plans
If you’re under 45 and have someone to take over someday, you’ve got options, but you need to think strategically.
Automation’s one path. Research from Wageningen University and Michigan State shows robotic milking systems can reduce labor costs 10-18%. But honestly, it’s as much about lifestyle as labor savings. Robots don’t need Christmas morning off, you know?
More important, though—join a producer organization if you haven’t already. The bigger German co-ops, their annual reports show, they’re getting 3-5% premiums over spot markets. When you’re facing these concentrated buyers, that collective voice might be your only real leverage.
What’s really interesting is operations finding ways around the commodity trap. Direct marketing, organic certification, value-added processing—anything that breaks that pure price-taker relationship.
I know several Bavarian producers who’ve shifted 30-40% of their production to on-farm processing. It’s not easy—we’re talking investments of €150,000 to €200,000, learning cheese-making or yogurt production, and dealing with food safety regulations. But they’re capturing €0.90 to €1.00 per liter equivalent versus €0.53 for commodity milk. That’s the difference between surviving and actually building something.
For Late-Career Producers
This is tough to talk about, but it needs saying. And I know it’s not easy to hear, especially if you’ve poured your life into your operation.
European Network for Rural Development research is pretty clear—farmers who make exit decisions within 18 months of sustained margin pressure typically preserve 60-80% of their equity. Those who hold on for three years or more, hoping for recovery… many lose everything.
If you’re in this position, do the math. Divide your available credit and savings by your monthly shortfall. If that number’s less than 18 months, you need to start planning now. Not next season. Now.
I understand the emotional weight of this decision. This isn’t just a business—it’s your heritage, your identity, your life’s work. But preserving what you’ve built —ensuring you have something to pass on or retire with —matters more than holding on until there’s nothing left.
Strategies That Work Regardless
No matter where you are in your career, some things just make sense.
Document your costs religiously. Everything—feed, labor, what you spent on that metritis outbreak last month, depreciation on equipment, your own time. The Dutch dairy board has excellent templates if you need them. When policy discussions happen, farmers with solid numbers have credibility.
Build relationships with your processor. FrieslandCampina’s 2024 supplier report and Arla’s recent guidelines both indicate they’re increasingly open to longer-term contracts with producers who maintain quality parameters and keep somatic cell counts in check. It won’t completely protect you from market swings, but it helps.
And please, connect with other producers. Research on agricultural mental health consistently shows that peer support makes a huge difference in stress management. Plus, collective action’s the only thing that moves policy. Look at what French farmers achieved with their early 2024 protests—they got real concessions because they worked together.
The North American Parallel
What’s happening in Germany isn’t unique. Let me give you a Wisconsin perspective, because I was just talking with producers there last month.
USDA Economic Research Service data from September shows four beef packers control 85% of U.S. processing. Different commodity, same dynamics. But in dairy, it’s playing out differently region by region.
In Wisconsin, where I spent time with a 200-cow operation near Eau Claire, the processor consolidation is real, but the retail dynamic’s different. They’ve got Kwik Trip—a regional chain that’s actually built relationships with local producers. The owner told me, “We’re getting $18.50 per hundredweight, which isn’t great, but it’s stable. The co-op knows if they squeeze us too hard, we’ve got options.”
That’s the difference—options. When you’ve got multiple buyers—even if they’re not perfect—you’ve got leverage.
Now, the Federal Milk Marketing Order system in the U.S. adds another layer of complexity. It sets minimum prices based on end use—Class I for fluid milk, Class III for cheese, and so on. But even with that safety net, when retail concentration hits a certain level, those minimums become maximums real quick.
Down in California, it’s another story entirely. The mega-dairies with 5,000-plus cows? They’re basically price-takers from the big processors. One operator near Tulare told me they’re looking at getting into renewable natural gas from manure just to diversify revenue. They’re projecting $3-4 million annually from RNG versus $12 million from milk on 6,000 cows. “Milk’s becoming a byproduct of our energy business,” he said. Wild to think about, but that’s adaptation.
Even Canada—with their supply management system that’s supposed to protect producers—the Canadian Dairy Commission’s recent quarterly report shows pressure. Retail concentration there means that even with production quotas, processors are getting squeezed, and that rolls downhill.
Innovation Born from Necessity
But here’s what gives me hope—farmers are incredibly innovative when pushed.
German agricultural organizations are documenting some fascinating adaptations. Operations near tourist areas are building serious secondary income through agritourism—farm stays, educational programs, even “adopt a cow” initiatives that create direct consumer relationships.
I visited one operation in the Black Forest region that’s pulling in €85,000 annually from agritourism versus €92,000 from milk. They’ve got six vacation apartments in a renovated barn, and offer farm breakfasts with their own products. “The cows became the attraction, not just production units,” the owner told me.

Energy production’s another avenue. The German Biogas Association reports that over 3,000 dairy farms have added anaerobic digesters in recent years. Depending on whether you’re running a dry lot or free stall system, a 300-500 cow operation can generate 1.5 to 3.5 megawatts. With feed-in tariffs in some regions, that’s income that doesn’t depend on milk prices.
What’s really intriguing is watching cooperatives move beyond commodity processing. FrieslandCampina’s latest annual report shows it pushing hard into specialized nutrition—sports recovery proteins and specific components for infant formula. These aren’t commodity products. The margins are multiples of the standard milk powder price.
They’ve realized they can’t compete with retailers on commodity terms, so they’re changing the game entirely. Smart move, if you ask me.
And you know what? This innovation isn’t just happening in Europe. I’m seeing U.S. producers getting creative, too. There’s a group in Vermont making cultured butter that sells for $24 a pound at farmers markets. A Wisconsin operation partnered with a local brewery to make milk stout—they’re getting paid double for that milk. These aren’t solutions for everyone, but they show what’s possible when you think outside the bulk tank.
The Bridge to Tomorrow
Here’s something I’ve been thinking about lately—we’re in this weird transition period where the old model is clearly broken but the new one hasn’t fully emerged yet.
The consolidation in retail and processing, the algorithmic pricing, the pressure on margins… these aren’t going away. But I’m also seeing the seeds of something different. Direct-to-consumer models are enabled by technology. Energy diversification that makes farms less dependent on milk prices alone. Cooperatives are moving up the value chain into specialized products.
It reminds me of the shift from cans to bulk tanks back in the day. That transition was brutal for some, an opportunity for others. The difference now? The pace of change is faster, and the imbalance of market power is more extreme.
Questions Worth Asking Yourself
As we’re having this conversation, here are some questions every producer should be thinking about:
What percentage of your milk goes to buyers with more than 30% market share? If it’s over 70%, you’re vulnerable to these dynamics we’ve been discussing.
How would a sustained 10% price cut affect your operation? Really run those numbers—including impacts on your replacement program, equipment maintenance, everything. If the answer involves burning through savings or taking on debt just to keep going, you need a Plan B.
Are you connected with producer organizations? If not, why not? In this market structure, that collective voice might be your only leverage.
Have you calculated what your operation’s worth—both as a going concern and in a wind-down scenario? It’s not fun math, but knowing those numbers helps you make strategic decisions.
The View from Here
That €1.39 butter in Bavaria isn’t just a crazy promotional price. It’s showing us where agricultural markets are heading when retail concentration meets algorithmic coordination.
“Every farm that exits permanently reduces the system’s ability to respond to shocks. When the next crisis hits, the system won’t have capacity. Prices won’t just increase—they’ll spike hard.”
These dynamics are going to reach every commodity ag sector within the next decade—if they haven’t already. The question isn’t whether these forces will affect your market. They will.
The question is whether you’ll be ready.
The German dairy sector’s giving us all a preview. Part warning, part roadmap. The warning’s clear: traditional market relationships are being fundamentally restructured by technology and concentration. Producers who don’t recognize and adapt to these new realities face serious challenges.
But there’s also a roadmap. We’ve navigated big changes before—the shift from cans to bulk tanks, quota eliminations in Europe, multiple price cycles that tested but didn’t break us. This one’s different in its mechanisms, but it’s still calling for the same farmer ingenuity we’ve always had.
Successful adaptation means understanding these dynamics, building collective strength, exploring value-added opportunities, and—this is crucial—making decisions based on data rather than hope or tradition.
I’ve spent 25 years watching this industry evolve, and I’ve never seen changes this fundamental happening this fast. But you know what? I’ve also never seen dairy producers fail to adapt once they understand what they’re facing.
That €13.70 production cost, butter selling for €1.39? It’s not sustainable, it’s not accidental, and it won’t fix itself through normal market forces. But understanding it—really grasping what it means—that’s your foundation for not just surviving but potentially thriving despite these new realities.
TAKE ACTION THIS WEEK:
Calculate Your Runway:
- Monthly cash burn rate ÷ available reserves = months until crisis
- If less than 18 months, start planning NOW
Connect With Support:
- Producer Organizations: Find yours at www.euromilk.org/members
- Mental Health Support: Agricultural crisis hotlines available 24/7
- Cost Tracking Tools: Free templates at www.dairynz.co.nz/business/budgeting
Build Your Network:
- Join or form a local discussion group
- Connect with processors about long-term contracts
- Explore value-added opportunities with other producers
The path forward requires clear thinking, collective action, and continued innovation, which have always been the hallmarks of successful dairy operations. These are challenging times, no doubt about it. But they’re far from insurmountable for those willing to see clearly and adapt accordingly.
Stay strong, stay connected, and keep asking the tough questions. We’re going to need all three to navigate what’s ahead.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- Retailers lose $8/pound on butter BY DESIGN: They profit from 40-70% margins on everything else while using dairy as bait—enabled by 85% market concentration
- Algorithms replaced negotiations: Pricing bots at four major chains synchronize within 48 hours, creating legal coordination that individual farmers can’t fight
- 2,800 farms vanish annually: Germany down from 75,000 to 47,000 farms in a decade—60% of survivors won’t make it to 2030 without adaptation
- Your decision window is 18 months, not years: Exit within 18 months = 60-80% equity preserved. Wait 3 years hoping for recovery = total loss
- Only three strategies are working: Join producer co-ops (+3-5% prices), add revenue streams ($40-120K from energy/agritourism), or time your exit strategically
Complete references and supporting documentation are available upon request by contacting the editorial team at editor@thebullvine.com.
Learn More:
- 2,800 Dairy Farms Will Close This Year—Here’s the 3-Path Survival Guide for the Rest – Provides concrete implementation strategies for farms facing the exact market pressures described in the butter analysis, offering three actionable pathways to navigate consolidation forces and maintain viability through 2030.
- The $11 Billion Betrayal: Your Processor Is Building Your Replacement Right Now – Reveals how processor consolidation compounds retail pressure, showing farmers the dual threat they face and why understanding both upstream and downstream concentration is critical for strategic positioning.
- Building a Beef-on-Dairy System: Capturing $360,000 in Annual Farm Profit – Demonstrates one of the most successful diversification strategies mentioned in the main article, with specific revenue calculations showing how beef-on-dairy shifted from 2% to 6% of total farm income for early adopters.
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