Cattle Market Weekly
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CATTLE MARKET WEEKLY

 

October 22, 2016

Market Commentary

Buyers continue heavy discount on un-weaned calves

Calf and feeder prices continued to soften this week, but increased buyer interest at some auctions, rebounding futures prices and a favorable Cattle on Feed report offer some optimism heading into next week.

Steer and heifer calves traded mostly $3-$6 per cwt lower, according to the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS). Feeder steers and heifers sold mostly $3-$4 lower.

“Many more spring-born calves are making their way to the marketplace in mid to late October and buyers continue to be very selective in their purchases,” AMS analysts say. “Preconditioning, weaning for over 30 days and two rounds of shots are paramount for producers to get top dollar for their calves.”

Un-weaned calves sold $10 lower at Oklahoma National Stockyards on Monday, according to AMS, while weaned steers sold steady to $2 higher; their heifer peers traded for steady money.

Likewise, at Billings Livestock Commission in Montana on Thursday, the AMS reporter said, “Buyers offered strong premiums for calves that were totally preconditioned (given both branding and weaning shots) or weaned for over one month. Strong demand was seen for load lots as buyers looked for one-iron cattle. The best demand continues to be for heavyweight calves over 600 pounds, with buyers often paying the same price per hundredweight as for lighter-weight calves, calculating their breakeven against the April board.”

Other than $1.50 and $1.17 higher at either end, Feeder Cattle futures were an average of $3.52 higher week to week, gathering back about half of the previous week’s decline.

“Since the second week of August, the October feeder cattle futures contract price has declined more than $24 per cwt. The price decline over the past two and a half months amounts to a value decrease of $350 to $400 per head,” says Andrew P. Griffith, agricultural economist at the University of Tennessee, in his weekly market comments.

“This means cow-calf producers, as well as stocker and backgrounding operations, have lost and continue to lose significant value in currently-owned animals. These price declines result in cash losses for margin operators while the same price declines result in revenue losses for the cow-calf producer.”

That helps explain why the fall calf run continues to be slow to develop.

“With September auction receipts 20% less than a year ago and October 13% behind, the big question is when the fall run will begin and its effect on the cash market,” said the AMS reporter on hand for Tuesday’s sale at Ozarks Regional Stockyards in West Plains, Mo.

The monthly Cattle on Feed report issued Friday (see “Feedlot placements less than expected” ) underscores the delayed marketing, with the lowest September placement number since the data series began in 1996.

Cattle feeders try for some leverage

Through late Friday afternoon, cash fed cattle trade was still in the air.

A few live sales traded in Nebraska on Wednesday at $97.00-$99.50 per cwt, which was $1 lower to $1.50 higher than the previous week’s $98. A few dressed sales there traded steady with the previous week at $154.

Other than that, cattle feeders were holding their ground, buoyed by the outlook for tighter numbers as the season continues, and by the surge in futures prices that began Thursday and continued into Friday. Week to week, Live Cattle futures were an average of $3.28 higher, gathering back about 75% of the previous week’s decline.

“Live cattle futures have come off their contract lows that were experienced the previous week, but signs of reversal have occurred twice in the past month and a half with no follow through,” Griffith says. “It is hard to imagine another large downward price movement in the finished cattle market, but it is not likely anyone imagined the abrupt price collapse over the past six months.”

Fed cattle the previous week traded for $98 in the Southern Plains and Northern Plains. Live sales in the western Corn Belt the previous week were at $95-$97, with dressed trade at $152-$156.

Wholesale beef values continued lower. Choice boxed beef cutout value was $2.08 lower week to week at $179.78 per cwt Friday afternoon. Select was $5.31 lower at $166.73.

“Regardless of the cut of beef, beef prices will come under pressure the next several weeks as turkey will take front and center heading into Thanksgiving and ham will do the same heading toward Christmas,” Griffith says. “It does not help the beef market that poultry and pork prices are extremely low.”

In fact, hog slaughter was record-large this week at a little more than 2.5 million head, according to AMS.

There’s plenty of meat on ice, too.

Total pounds of beef in freezers Sept. 30 were 9% more than the previous month and 4% more than the previous year, according to the October USDA Cold Storage report. Beef in cold storage was the most for September since the data was first recorded in 1932.

Total red meat supplies in freezers were up 7% from the previous month (record-large for the month) and up slightly from last year. Total frozen poultry supplies were down 2% from the previous month but up 2% from the previous year.

Exports help absorb the supply shock

“The net change in 2016 trade compared to 2015 due to the decline in imports and increase in exports has been 405 million pounds less beef on the U.S. market,” says David Anderson, Extension agricultural economist with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, in the latest In the Cattle Markets. “While beef production is up almost 1 billion pounds though the first three quarters of the year, total supplies are only up 628 million pounds. When the growth in exports is included, the total available beef on the U.S. market has only grown by about 528 million pounds”  

Analysts with USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) expect U.S. beef exports to increase by almost 9% in 2016 and by almost 7% next year. In the latest monthly Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook they also forecast beef imports about 10% lower this year, followed by 11% less in 2017.

Imports of live cattle to the U.S. are shrinking, too—17% less year over year through August, according to ERS. Through August, cattle imports from Mexico were 22% less.

“Imports began to decline around May, at the same time that U.S. feeder cattle prices began to decline,” ERS analysts say. “Declining U.S. feeder cattle prices and fairly good pasture conditions in Mexico are expected to continue to weigh on imports.”


In Other Market News

Feedlot placements are less than expected

Statistics in the monthly Cattle on Feed report issued by USDA on Friday underscore the hesitancy of cow-calf producers to market calves this fall.

Placements in September (1.91 million head) were 2% less than last year, representing the lowest placement number for the month since the series began in 1996. Heading into the report, the average of analyst estimates called for an increase of 3.3%, according to the Urner Barry survey, shared by the Daily Livestock Report.

“The absence of a mid-year Cattle report creates uncertainty as to supplies of feeder cattle outside feedlots, but placements are assumed to remain relatively large for the remainder of the year,” explained analysts with USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) in this month’s Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook. “However, declining fed cattle prices and reduced feeder cattle margins may also affect the pace of near-term cattle on feed placements.”

Cattle weighing more than 800 pounds represented 42% of the September placements; cattle weighing 700-799 pounds represented 24%.

The monthly report also offers another glimpse to slowing herd expansion.

Cattle on feed Oct. 1 (10.3 million head) was about even with the prior year, but heifers and heifer calves represented 4% more of the mix than the same time a year earlier. Heading into the report, analysts expected the total on-feed inventory to be about 1% more.

Marketings of fed cattle during September (1.73 million head) were 5% more than a year earlier. Ahead of the report, analysts estimated an increase of about 6%.


 

CATTLE MARKET WEEKLY by Wes Ishmael



Calf-Feeder Trade

Receipts Auction Direct Video/Net Total
Week-Oct. 21 274,900 49,700 600 325,200
Week-Oct. 14 236,100 62,500 18,900 317,500
Prior Year 281,200 40,100 3,100 324,400


Regional Steer Price Average

North Central

Steers-Cash Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
600-700 lbs ↑↑ $0.88 $125.90
700-800 lbs ↓↓ $3.38 $125.97
800-900 lbs ↓↓ $4.29 $122.65

South Central

Steers-Cash Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
500-600 lbs ↓↓ $4.70 $119.03
600-700 lbs ↓↓ $4.83 $117.09
700-800 lbs ↓↓ $2.64 $120.59

 

Southeast

Steers-Cash Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
400-500 lbs ↓↓ $5.61 $115.99
500-600 llbs ↓↓ $4.34 $109.27
600-700 lbs ↓↓  $3.21 $102.96

CME Feeder Index

Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 20
↓↓ $2.83 $120.66

CME Feeder Cattle Futures

Month Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
Oct ↑↑ $1.500 $121.875
Nov ↑↑ $4.050 $119.700
Jan ↑↑ $3.500 $115.500

CME Live Cattle Futures

Month Change
from Prior Week
Oct .21
Oct ↑↑ $5.250 $101.150
Dec ↑↑ $4.425 $101.875
Feb ↑↑ $3.425 $102.800

CME Corn Futures

Month Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
Dec ↓↓ $0.018 $3.524
Mar '17 ↓↓ $0.014 $3.622
May '17 ↓↓ $0.012 $3.690

CME Oil Futures

Month Change
from Prior Week
Oct. 21
Dec ↑↑ $0.10 $50.85
Jan '17 ↑↑ $0.17 $51.43
Feb '17 ↑↑ $0.27 $52.00