Weekly Outlook: Cattle Business Is Back

US - Suddenly, owning cattle looks like a stroke of genius. In a few short months, cattle prices have staged a seemingly miraculous comeback, according to Chris Hurt, Extension Economist at Purdue University.
calendar icon 27 April 2010
clock icon 4 minute read
Chris Hurt Chris Hurt
Extension Economist
Purdue University

In December, finished cattle were $80 per hundredweight, now they are $100. Calves were $1.05 a pound, now they are over $1.30. The reasons are clear: the world economy continues to recover, feed prices are lower, red meat supplies are down, exports are strong, and retail beef prices have been low. Now the question is can it last?

Beef production in the US so far this year has been down one per cent. A somewhat higher rate of slaughter has been more than offset by lower cattle weights. However, there are even more important reasons to explain why cattle prices are so strong. US and international consumers are feeling more confident and they are competing for reduced meat supplies around the globe. Foreign consumers want more beef from the US and from other exporting countries. In the first two months of 2010 for which data are available, US beef exports were up 24 per cent. At the same time US beef imports from our competitors like Australia, New Zealand, and Brazil were down 23 per cent. The result of modestly smaller US production with such strong exports and reduced imports is that beef supplies per person during the first quarter in the US were down about five per cent. Similar data for pork reveal a six per cent reduction.

Retailers have kept beef prices low in early 2010 and this has kept consumers fighting for reduced beef supplies and assisted in the cattle price surge. Retail beef prices in the first quarter averaged $4.23 per pound, which was down 10 cents a pound from a year earlier. Lower beef prices help to stimulate consumers to buy more beef. One of the reasons live cattle prices are so much stronger is because retailers had not yet moved their retail prices higher. In the first quarter, as retail prices were down 10 cents, retail margins dropped by 20 cents per pound. This means that retailers primarily absorbed the higher wholesale beef prices at the expense of their own margins. In essence, this creates a period of seemingly strong demand because retail prices do not move up as quickly as wholesale prices.

The positive demand benefits of narrow retail margins and lower retail prices will not continue as retailers will be increasing beef prices this spring and summer. We can expect to see retail prices move back to record high levels, which were $4.46 per pound in the third quarter of 2008. In fact, it is likely that consumer prices will set new records this summer and fall. Given the weakly recovering economy, consumer demand may not appear so robust this summer with record high beef prices in grocery stores and restaurants.

Calf prices have increased about 25 per cent since December as a result of much higher finished cattle prices and lower feed prices. Midwest cash corn prices were near $4 per bushel late last fall, but are now below $3.50. Soybean meal prices have been about $35 per ton cheaper this April compared to last December. Bright production prospects for the 2010 crops have also strengthened the desire to buy calves and feed cattle.

Most importantly is the question of whether these strong prices continue. The answer is yes, but not as strong as being experiencing this spring. Per capita beef production should be down about two to three per cent for the rest of the year, but the smallest of those supplies is expected this spring. The economic recovery continues to grow momentum in the US and that is likely to continue, although unemployment rates will be slow to drop. On the negative side of the ledger, higher retail beef prices will cut into consumption by this summer and fall.

Finished cattle prices are expected to be at their yearly highs this spring. Summer prices are expected to be in the low-to-mid $90s, with fall prices moving back upward several dollars. For 2010, prices may average about $93, dramatically above the $83 of 2009. Prospects for 2011 should remain strong as well, perhaps moving close to $95 for the year.

More cattle will move into feedlots given the strong prospects for finished cattle prices and moderate feed prices. If the 2010 crops develop normally, calf prices should be 20 to 25 per cent above last year’s levels. Steer calves averaged about $1.05 a pound in the eastern Corn Belt in the fall of 2009. This means they could average $1.25 to $1.35 this fall. While these are the strongest prices since the fall of 2005, they still may not be high enough to encourage cow-calf producers to expand given the much higher costs of production today.

Once more, it’s great to be able to say, “The cattle industry is back.”

TheCattleSite News Desk

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