Beef Herd Expansion Has Halted
Published: Friday, November 1, 2019
USDA's October Cattle on Feed report, released on Oct. 25, indicated that the nation's on-feed inventory of 11.3 million head was about 1 percent smaller than a year ago, but still more than 4 percent larger than two years ago. Although the total number of cattle on feed was smaller than a year earlier, there were more females on feed as the number of heifers on feed was up just over 2 percent compared to October 2018, according to Purdue University agricultural economist James Mintert.
Net placements (gross placements minus other disappearance) of cattle on feed rose 2 percent above a year earlier during September, but were nearly 3 percent smaller than two years ago.
"Feeders backed away from placing both very heavy weight feeders and very light weight feeders on feed in September as placements of cattle weighing over 800 pounds and those weighing less than 600 pounds declined about 1 percent, both compared to September 2018," Mintert said. "Instead, cattle feeders focused their efforts on placing cattle weighing between 600-699 pounds and 700-799 pounds, as placements in both of those weight categories rose more than 7 percent compared to a year earlier."
Year-to-date U.S. cattle slaughter in 2019 has been 1.4 percent larger than in 2018, but at the same time dressed cattle weights averaged nearly 1 percent below a year ago, which held the year-to-year increase in U.S. beef production to just .5 percent. When the effects of international trade (both imports and exports) are included, beef supplies facing U.S. consumers so far in 2019 have been almost 1 percent larger than during 2018 as exports this year have fallen below those of 2018.
"Although it does not appear that any significant cattle herd liquidation has begun, it's become increasingly clear that expansion of the U.S. herd has ground to a halt. An examination of cattle slaughter data through mid-October indicates that female slaughter (cow-plus-heifer slaughter) expressed as a percentage of steer slaughter rose to nearly 97 percent in 2019 versus just 90 percent a year ago," Mintert notes.
"When female slaughter is that high relative to steer slaughter, it is an indication that cow-calf producers have put aside any intentions to expand their herds and, in some cases, might actually be reducing their herd size," he adds. "The female-to-steer slaughter ratio is also consistent with the year-to-year increase in the inventory of females on feed in commercial feed yards, providing further evidence that the Jan. 1, 2020 All Cattle and Calves Inventory will either be equal to or perhaps slightly smaller than the 2019 inventory."
Choice boxed beef prices this year have averaged $222 per hundredweight compared to $214 in 2018, while Select box prices averaged $206 per hundredweight compared to $203 in 2018. Although the Choice-Select spread tends to widen seasonally as we move into fall, the spread this year has been unusually wide, averaging over $26 per hundredweight in October 2019 versus less than $12 a year earlier, Mintert explains.
"Prices for slaughter steers so far this year have averaged about $116 per hundredweight in the Southern Plains, less than $1 per hundredweight below the same period in 2018. Recent fed-steer prices have also been weaker than last year, trading in the $108-109 range compared to $111 in early October 2018," he said.
Eastern Corn Belt feeder cattle and calf prices this year have also averaged below prices observed during 2018. Year-to-date, prices for 700-800 pound steers in Kentucky averaged $132 per hundredweight in 2019 compared to $139 over the same period in 2018. Recently, prices for yearling feeder steers in Kentucky have traded from the upper $120s to the upper $130s. Prices for 500-600 pound steers in Kentucky averaged $139 so far in 2019 versus $156 a year ago, and recent prices for lightweight steer calves have been trading in the low $130s.
"Cattle feeders have struggled since this past spring as large losses have mounted in the cattle feeding sector. Iowa State data simulating returns to a traditional yearling feeding program that does not engage in an active price risk management program indicates feeders have been losing substantial sums since late spring with losses exceeding $200 per head in September. Losses in the feeding sector have put downward pressure on calf and feeder prices this fall," Mintert states.
What lies ahead?
"Per capita beef supplies are expected to be flat compared to a year ago this fall, leading to a fourth-quarter 2019 fed-steer average in the Southern Plains near last year's average of $117 per hundred-weight," he explains. "Calf and feeder prices in the Eastern Corn Belt are likely to trade sideways from recent levels. Prices for lightweight feeders have struggled to maintain a premium over heavier-weight feeders as cattle feeders' bids for lightweight steers and heifers reflect concerns over increases in corn prices combined with the risk of poor feeding performance given cold, wet weather in the Plains and portions of the Western Corn Belt."
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