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Renew Deal

(81,847 posts)
Sat Jan 18, 2014, 10:19 PM Jan 2014

U.S. Cattle Futures Top Records

CHICAGO–U.S. cattle futures settled at fresh all-time highs in nearly every contract at the close of the trading session, lifted by new peaks for wholesale beef and cash cattle prices.

Supplies of slaughter-ready cattle remain historically small, forcing meat processors and, in turn, retailers, to pay up to fill orders for beef products.

February live-cattle rose 0.72 cent, or 0.5%, to $1.4015 a pound at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, CME -0.01% well off intraday highs, but notching a new closing record for any front-month contract. April live cattle advanced 0.27 cent to $1.3922 a pound, the highest closing price in the lifetime of that contract. Other contracts ended slightly higher.
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http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303465004579324590543941908

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U.S. Cattle Futures Top Records (Original Post) Renew Deal Jan 2014 OP
Seems like the traders are a bit concerned about the weather. n/t A HERETIC I AM Jan 2014 #1
Here are a couple of excerpts pipoman Jan 2014 #2
Interesting. A HERETIC I AM Jan 2014 #4
This is a weekly market report pipoman Jan 2014 #6
humans have no need to eat dead cows. no big deal really :-) nt msongs Jan 2014 #3
It really sucks though.... A HERETIC I AM Jan 2014 #5
 

pipoman

(16,038 posts)
2. Here are a couple of excerpts
Sat Jan 18, 2014, 10:51 PM
Jan 2014

From my food supplier's weekly market report.

diarrhea virus and the impact of  two years of drought bringing cattle numbers to the lowest count since 1962.

 

2014 is starting off with the markets going higher. An interesting way of looking at the protein market is this Cattle-Fax report comparison. In 2000, beef was 7% higher than pork and 78% higher than poultry, but by the end of 2013, beef was 35% higher than pork and 148% higher than chicken. The message this sends to our customers is pretty simple: even though beef is a much desired protein, operators had better produce a quality dining experience that makes it worth the price.

Snip

BEEF

Typically after the holiday season is not a time when markets make dramatic moves.  However, fed cattle prices set another record high last week and are now firmly in uncharted territory. The jump began due to a weather market, and has gained momentum as a short-bought industry looked to secure product ahead of the short term spike The average boxed beef cutout value jumped nearly $2/cwt.  and now resides at approximately $211/cwt. Last year’s highest point was only $202/cwt. It is time to have a conversation with your customers so they don’t get sticker shock. Following two consecutive exceptionally low holiday shortened kill weeks, cutout values have jumped sharply since the beginning of the year. This is particularly true for ground chuck and ground round prices, which recorded all time high levels today. The high on Friday’s USDA for ground chuck was a staggering $3.60/lb, $1/lb higher than the previous record high quote.

 

We are seeing outside cuts setting records as hot as the day is cold. Top rounds, flats, knuckles and clods leading the way by a wide margin, at levels up 25% from a year ago, which previously represented the highest pricing on record. There isn’t much to stop the upward momentum over the short term as the record prices are still driving sales as we are experiencing shortages on all these cuts. The good news is that what goes up must come down; and I expect February to be a complete retracement of early year gains setting us up again for record highs in April.

 

Middle meats are down since the holiday and will remain soft until February as there is not a lot of grilling going on this month with the record cold in much of the nation.. So where does this leave us? The ranchers and feeders have the upper hand and business is good. The packers are bleeding money at a loss between 60-100 dollars a head. The packer can cut back to 32 hours to try and recover their cost. If they continue to take a loss in the rounds and the chucks they will need raise price on middles. It’s a Mexican standoff. However, there is seemingly very little demand present that will support current price levels. Weather and reduced supply induced panic buying that pushed prices to record highs. Cattlemen that have cows will likely continue to be profitable, and if Mother Nature cooperates, this will lead to expansion of the U.S. cattle herd and longer term larger supplies and lower cattle prices. Come on 2015



 

pipoman

(16,038 posts)
6. This is a weekly market report
Sun Jan 19, 2014, 09:12 AM
Jan 2014

I am sent by my food supplier via email. I am responsible for purchasing around $350k annually in food.

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