US cattle futures end lower in about-face from rallies - CME

Strong demand from packers supported gains
calendar icon 13 June 2022
clock icon 2 minute read

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) live cattle futures fell on Friday on profit-taking, a session after prices reached multi-week highs, reported Reuters, citing brokers.

The market was due to pull back after climbing 6% since dropping on 31 May to their lowest price since October, brokers said. Strong demand from packers for a limited supply of cattle supported the gains, along with firm cash prices this week, analysts said.

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA), in a monthly report, raised its projection for domestic beef production due to higher expected slaughtering that more than offsets lighter carcass weights.

Packers slaughtered an estimated 124,000 head of cattle on Friday, up 4% from a year ago, the USDA said separately.

Strong demand from processors means there is no backlog of cattle waiting to be slaughtered, said Dennis Smith, commodity broker for Archer Financial Services.

"The packer is not cherry picking the show list and just being really choosy," Smith said.

CME June live cattle ended down 0.850 cent at 136.200 cents. The most-active August contact dropped 1 cent to 136.200 cents, after jumping on Thursday to its highest price since 27 April.

CME August feeder cattle slid 1.550 cents to 174.475 cents per pound, a day after the contract touched its highest price since 4 May.

In the pork market, most-active July lean hog futures rose 0.475 cent to close at 105.475 cents per pound.

Smithfield Foods, the world's largest pork processor, said it will close a Vernon, California, plant and reduce its hog herd in the western United States. The closure comes as California rolls out a new law, Proposition 12, that requires livestock be given more spacious confinements. 

"I think it's a threat right now," Smith said of Smithfield's decision. "I think they will follow through on the threat if it looks like this Prop 12 is going into place."

Source: Reuters

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