WLI

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Cattle Current Podcast-May 4, 2018

Negotiated cash fed cattle trade was $2 higher in the Southern Plains at $126/cwt. on Thursday. Elsewhere, prices were trending generally steady with the previous week, but a higher range in Nebraska with too few to trend.

That and strong wholesale beef values helped push Cattle futures sharply higher, led by Live Cattle.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.20 higher.

Other than 17¢ higher in the back contract, Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $1.84 higher. 

Choice boxed beef cutout value was 26¢ higher Thursday afternoon at $227.56/cwt. Select was $1.29 higher at $209.17.

Cattle Current Podcast-May 4, 2018 2018-05-03T19:37:31-05:00

Cattle Current Daily-May 4, 2018

Negotiated cash fed cattle trade was $2 higher in the Southern Plains at $126/cwt. on Thursday. Elsewhere, prices were trending generally steady with the previous week, but a higher range in Nebraska with too few to trend.

That and strong wholesale beef values helped push Cattle futures sharply higher, led by Live Cattle.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.20 higher.

Other than 17¢ higher in the back contract, Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $1.84 higher

Choice boxed beef cutout value was 26¢ higher Thursday afternoon at $227.56/cwt. Select was $1.29 higher at $209.17.

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Major U.S. financial indices closed narrowly mixed on Thursday. There were sharp losses early in the session, tied to worries about the possible trade war with China, and then support by the end of the day with more positive quarterly earnings reports.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 5 points higher. The S&P 500 closed 5 points lower. The NASDAQ closed 12 points lower.

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There are two supply-related keys to cull cow prices for the balance of this year, according to analysts with the Livestock Marketing Information Center (LMIC). One is persistently low milk prices that could increase dairy cow slaughter more than expected. The other is drought, which could force the culling of more beef cows than anticipated.

In the latest Livestock Monitor, LMIC analysts point out that so far this year, federally inspected cow slaughter is 7% more than last year—10% more for beef cows and 5% more for dairy cows.

Cattle Current Daily-May 4, 2018 2018-05-03T19:35:39-05:00

Cattle Current Podcast-May 3, 2018

Country cash fed cattle trade remained undeveloped through Wednesday afternoon. Four lots (413 head from Kansas) sold out of the 2,982 head offered in the weekly Fed Cattle Exchange auction, for a weighted average price of $122.40/cwt. (delivery 1-9 days). That was $2 less than most of last week’s country trade in the region.

Cattle futures continued the same overall sideways back and forth of late, this time settling mostly higher.

Other than 97¢ and 10¢ lower in the front two contracts, Live Cattle futures closed an average of 75¢ higher.

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of 87¢ higher (55¢ to $1.17 higher).

Boxed beef cutout values moved higher on Wednesday with moderate to fairly good demand and light to moderate offerings, according to the Agricultural Marketing Service. Select and Choice rib, chuck, round, and loin cuts steady to firm.

Choice boxed beef cutout value was 87¢ higher Wednesday afternoon at $227.30/cwt. Select was 79¢ higher at $207.88.

Cattle Current Podcast-May 3, 2018 2018-05-02T20:54:30-05:00

Cattle Current Daily-May 3, 2018

Country cash fed cattle trade remained undeveloped through Wednesday afternoon. Four lots (413 head from Kansas) sold out of the 2,982 head offered in the weekly Fed Cattle Exchange auction, for a weighted average price of $122.40/cwt. (delivery 1-9 days). That was $2 less than most of last week’s country trade in the region.

Cattle futures continued the same overall sideways back and forth of late, this time settling mostly higher.

Other than 97¢ and 10¢ lower in the front two contracts, Live Cattle futures closed an average of 75¢ higher.

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of 87¢ higher (55¢ to $1.17 higher).

Boxed beef cutout values moved higher on Wednesday with moderate to fairly good demand and light to moderate offerings, according to the Agricultural Marketing Service. Select and Choice rib, chuck, round, and loin cuts steady to firm.

Choice boxed beef cutout value was 87¢ higher Wednesday afternoon at $227.30/cwt. Select was 79¢ higher at $207.88.

******************************

Major U.S. financial indices closed lower in late selling on Wednesday, perhaps on profit taking. Indices were higher for most of the session, supported by the Fed’s decision to leave interest rates unchanged, as expected.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 174 points lower. The S&P 500 closed 19 points lower. The NASDAQ closed 29 points lower.

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Consumer adoption of online grocery shopping continues to grow, but slowly compared to other categories.

 About 10% of U.S. consumers regularly buy groceries on line, according to a new report from the NPD Group (NPD). Nearly all of those (99%) still shop in brick-and-mortar grocery stores, too.

As might be suspected, a key reason more consumers haven’t adopted buying groceries online more quickly has to do with wanting to select their own fresh items. Another is a reluctance to pay for delivery.

According to NPD, the benefits of online grocery shopping, like not needing to leave home, price comparisons, speed, and not having to wait in lines are enough for a growing number of consumers to be enticed, but not enough to get them to do all of their grocery shopping online. 

The NPD folks suggest groceries may follow the same path as other categories, like electronics, where consumers still want to see the item up close and personal.  Like electronics, NPD analysts say often the answer is in an omnichannel approach, which many of the major grocers are now offering.

“With major brick-and-mortar grocery stores announcing click and collect and various speedy delivery options, the line between physical and online is blurring and, as a result, consumers are getting the best of both worlds,” says Darren Seifer, NPD food and beverage industry analyst. “There is also a place for pure-play ecommerce grocers but it looks like, as of now, consumers want a seamless experience between brick-and-mortar and e-commerce.”

Cattle Current Daily-May 3, 2018 2018-05-02T20:52:00-05:00

Cattle Current Podcast-May 2, 2018

Increased grain prices helped pressure Feeder Cattle futures on Tuesday, while apparent continued fund liquidation held Live Cattle in check.

Other than 22¢ and $1.35 higher in the back two contracts, Live Cattle futures closed an average of 49¢ lower.

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $2.09 lower across the front half of the board ($1.50 to $2.72 lower) and then an average of 51¢ lower.

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $2.01 higher Tuesday afternoon at $226.43/cwt. Select was $2.30 higher at $207.09.

Cattle Current Podcast-May 2, 2018 2018-05-01T18:44:03-05:00

Cattle Current-May 2, 2018

Increased grain prices helped pressure Feeder Cattle futures on Tuesday, while apparent continued fund liquidation held Live Cattle in check.

Other than 22¢ and $1.35 higher in the back two contracts, Live Cattle futures closed an average of 49¢ lower.

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $2.09 lower across the front half of the board ($1.50 to $2.72 lower) and then an average of 51¢ lower.

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $2.01 higher Tuesday afternoon at $226.43/cwt. Select was $2.30 higher at $207.09.

******************************

Major U.S. financial indices closed mixed on Tuesday. Support came from a surge in Apple stock, ahead of that company’s after-hours earnings report.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 64 points lower. The S&P 500 closed 6 points higher. The NASDAQ closed 64 points higher.

******************************

Trade war concerns continue to drive a sharp decline in producer sentiment toward the agricultural economy, according to the latest Purdue University/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer.

The April barometer reading of 125 was 10 points lower than a month earlier and 15 points below the February reading. The barometer is based on a monthly survey of 400 agricultural producers from across the country.

The drop in producer sentiment was driven by declines in both the Index of Current Conditions, which fell 11 points to 123, and the Index of Future Expectations, which fell 9 points to 126.

The Index of Current Conditions was at its lowest level since May 2017. The Ag Economy Barometer and the Index of Future Expectations were at their lowest levels since March 2017.

“There seems to be a spillover effect that is driving concern among agricultural producers,” says James Mintert, the barometer’s principal investigator and director of Purdue University’s Center for Commercial Agriculture. “Negative perceptions about exports spill over into lower expectations for commodity prices, and then that changes producers’ views about farmland prices.”

The biggest issue surrounding U.S. agriculture and the trade dispute with China currently revolves around the possible impact on U.S. soybean exports, according to Mintert. About 30% of U.S. soybean exports go to China.

Producers were also more pessimistic about the livestock sector, in the April survey. Just 45% said they felt optimistic about the future, compared to 59% a month earlier. That’s the largest one-month drop since data collection began in fall 2015.

“There was already a sharp drop in hog prices that took place from mid to late- winter,” Mintert explains. “Then, add to that the impact of China’s 25% tariff on U.S. pork imports. It adds a layer of doubt regarding the profitability of pork production and appears to be affecting producers’ plans to increase hog production.”

Cattle Current-May 2, 2018 2018-05-01T18:41:51-05:00

Cattle Current Podcast-May 1, 2018

Cash fed cattle trade last week ended up mostly $2-$3 higher in the Southern Plains at mostly $124/cwt. Live trade in Nebraska was mostly $4 higher at mostly $126; steady to $3 higher in the beef at $195-$198. Live trade in the western Corn Belt was mostly $1 higher at mostly $123-$126; mostly steady to $2 higher in the beef at mostly $195-$197

That and significantly higher wholesale beef values should help maintain the market stability established last week. Cattle futures closed lower on Monday with light trade, but apparently due to position squaring at the end of the month, rather than a directional shift.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.25 lower (70¢ to $1.87 lower).

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $1.87 lower ($1.60 to $2.05 lower).

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $2.68 higher Monday afternoon at $224.42/cwt. Select was 47¢ higher at $204.79.

Cattle Current Podcast-May 1, 2018 2018-04-30T21:38:41-05:00

Cattle Current Daily-May 1, 2018

Cash fed cattle trade last week ended up mostly $2-$3 higher in the Southern Plains at mostly $124/cwt. Live trade in Nebraska was mostly $4 higher at mostly $126; steady to $3 higher in the beef at $195-$198. Live trade in the western Corn Belt was mostly $1 higher at mostly $123-$126; mostly steady to $2 higher in the beef at mostly $195-$197

That and significantly higher wholesale beef values should help maintain the market stability established last week. Cattle futures closed lower on Monday with light trade, but apparently due to position squaring at the end of the month, rather than a directional shift.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.25 lower (70¢ to $1.87 lower).

Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $1.87 lower ($1.60 to $2.05 lower).

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $2.68 higher Monday afternoon at $224.42/cwt. Select was 47¢ higher at $204.79.

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Major U.S. financial indices closed lower on Monday, with some likely profit taking. T-Mobile’s announced intention to acquire rival, Sprint, also applied pressure.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 148 points lower. The S&P 500 closed 21 points lower. The NASDAQ closed 53 points lower.

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“Higher cutout values are feeding into higher fed cattle prices,” says David Anderson, Extension livestock economist at Texas A&M University, in the latest issue of In the Cattle Markets. “The Choice beef cutout started this week at $224.50, up $13 in the last seven weekdays. The Choice cutout is about $5 above this point a year ago, while fed cattle prices are about $12 below this point last year. That has resulted in a live-to-cutout price spread more than $100 per head greater than April 2017. The Choice-Select spread is widening, seasonally, as the Choice cutout has increased faster than the Select cutout.”

Plus, Anderson reminds that the lingering winter likely delayed beef orders and featuring.

“There is some evidence of a rapid spike in beef orders for retail featuring over the next several months,” Anderson explains. “The rib and loin primal cut values are pulling the cutout higher with both primals up over $20 in the last week.”

Cattle Current Daily-May 1, 2018 2018-04-30T21:36:39-05:00

Cattle Current Weekly Highlights-Week ending Apr. 27, 2018

Markets firmed, helped along by significantly higher wholesale beef values and the gap in harvest-ready supplies in the short term.

Calves and yearlings sold fully steady to $5/cwt. higher, with instances of $7-$10 higher, according to the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS).

“The previous week’s higher fed cattle market and a neutral to slightly bullish Cattle on Feed Report caused feeder prices to come out of the gate with active bidding and good demand,” AMS analysts say. “Demand remains very good for

steer calves weighing 400-650 lbs. Most top quality 600-750 lb. steers that are long-timed weaned, with good weighing conditions and suitable for grass are in very good demand.”

Not counting newly-minted away Apr, Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $2.30 higher week to week on Friday.

“The futures market has already priced in a seasonal price increase for feeder cattle, which may or may not come to fruition,” says Andrew P. Griffith, agricultural economist at the University of Tennessee, in his weekly market comments. “The basic thought is that the seasonal tendency will remain and feeder cattle prices will move higher from May through August. At this point there is very little reason to be bearish on this expectation. In actuality, one might have a tendency to be a little bullish towards this market since prices have held serve with strong cattle on feed numbers and several international trade issues.”

Negotiated cash fed cattle prices moved higher on Friday, after a softer feel the day before. Live sales in the Southern Plains were $2-$3 higher than the previous week at $124/cwt., on active trade and good demand. There were too few transactions to trend elsewhere, but demand was strong, suggesting higher prices in the Northern Plains and western Corn Belt, too.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.86 higher week to week on Friday (62¢ higher to $5.10 higher in spot Apr).

“The talk around cattle pens is not about how impressive live cattle prices are but how steep a discount June Live Cattle futures are relative to current cash prices,” Griffith says. “The live cattle market is experiencing a record-strong basis for the June contract. Currently, cash live cattle trade is $17/cwt. higher than where the June contract is trading.”

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $9.76 higher week to week on Friday at $221.74/cwt. Select was $4.19 higher at $204.32.

“Boxed beef cut-out values appear to have bottomed and are on the rise with

excellent movement,” AMS analysts say. “Retailers have shifted their focus to beef as cutout values rallied this week and are expected to move higher. Spring has been delayed, but we are entering a period of warmer weather. Increase in foodservice and retail demand comes with warm weather and incites consumers to venture out and dust off the grills with Mother’s Day, graduations, Father’s Day and Memorial weekend around the corner.”

Friday to Friday Change*

Weekly Auction Receipts

Receipts

Apr. 27

Auction (head)

(Change)

Direct (head)

(Change)

Video/net (head)

(Change)

Total (head)

(Change)

 

234,500

(+51,700)

58,100

(-4,400)

3,600

(+2,900)

296,200

(+50,200)

 

CME Feeder Index

CME Feeder Index Apr. 26 Change
  $139.99    +  3.43

*Thursday-to Thursday for CME Feeder Index

 

Cash Stocker and Feeder

North Central

Steers-Cash Apr. 27  Change 
600-700 lbs. $168.73 +  $4.68
700-800 lbs. $152.30 +  $3.89
800-900 lbs. $140.27 +  $2.81

South Central

Steers-Cash Apr. 27 Change
500-600 lbs. $169.92 +  $0.93
600-700 lbs. $159.08 +  $3.25
700-800 lbs. $144.15 +  $2.74

Southeast

Steers-Cash Apr. 27 Change 
400-500 lbs. $170.21 +  $0.38
500-600 lbs. $159.06 +  $1.53
600-700 lbs. $147.47 +  $3.41

(AMS National Weekly Feeder & Stocker Cattle Summary)

 

Wholesale Beef Value

Boxed Beef  (p.m.) Apr. 27 ($/cwt) Change
Choice $221.74 +   $9.76
Select $204.32 +   $4.19   
Ch-Se Spread   $17.42 +   $5.57

 

Futures

Feeder Cattle  Apr. 27 Change
Apr $139.900 +   $2.600
May $142.025 +   $2.700
Aug $148.250 +   $3.750
Sep $148.350 +   $2.775
Oct $148.200 +   $2.000
Nov $147.275 +   $1.475
Jan ’19 $143.275 +   $1.425
Mar $141.000 +   $1.650

 

Live Cattle   Apr. 27 Change
Apr $124.450 +   $5.100
Jun $107.000 +   $3.725
Aug $105.975 +   $2.175
Oct $109.400 +   $1.250
Dec $113.800 +   $1.125
Feb ’19 $115.375 +   $1.125
Apr $115.925 +   $0.625
Jun $109.450 +   $0.625
Aug $108.500 +   $1.025    

 

Corn futures Apr. 27 Change
May $3.894 +  $0.130
Jul $3.984 +  $0.130
Sep $4.054 +  $0.124
Dec $4.144 +  $0.120
Mar ’19 $4.220 +  $0.118  
May $4.262 +  $0.118

 

Oil CME-WTI Apr. 27 Change
Jun $68.10 –     $0.30
Jul $67.98 –     $0.20
Aug $67.63 –     $0.03
Sep $67.10 +    $0.05
Oct $66.52 +    $0.09
Nov $65.97 +    $0.12

 

Equities

Equity Indexes Apr. 27 Change
Dow Industrial Average 24311.19 –    151.75
NASDAQ    7119.80 –      26.33
S&P 500    2669.71 –       0.23
Dollar (DXY)        91.50 +       1.18
Cattle Current Weekly Highlights-Week ending Apr. 27, 2018 2018-04-29T14:56:25-05:00

Cattle Current Podcast-Apr. 30, 2018

Negotiated cash fed cattle prices moved higher on Friday, after a softer feel the day before. Live sales in the Southern Plains were $2-$3 higher than the previous week at $124/cwt., on active trade and good demand. There were too few transactions to trend elsewhere, but demand was strong, suggesting higher prices in the Northern Plains and western Corn Belt, too.

That and significantly higher wholesale beef values week to week helped lift Cattle futures late in the session.

Live Cattle futures closed an average of $1.81 higher through the front five contracts ($1.02 to $2.65 higher) and then an average of 41¢ higher.

Except for 42¢ lower in Mar, Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of 97¢ higher (22¢ to $1.75 higher).

Choice boxed beef cutout value was $1.59 higher Friday afternoon at $221.74/cwt. Select was 16¢ lower at $204.42.

Cattle Current Podcast-Apr. 30, 2018 2018-04-28T18:11:30-05:00

This Is A Custom Widget

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This Is A Custom Widget

This Sliding Bar can be switched on or off in theme options, and can take any widget you throw at it or even fill it with your custom HTML Code. Its perfect for grabbing the attention of your viewers. Choose between 1, 2, 3 or 4 columns, set the background color, widget divider color, activate transparency, a top border or fully disable it on desktop and mobile.

This Is A Custom Widget

This Sliding Bar can be switched on or off in theme options, and can take any widget you throw at it or even fill it with your custom HTML Code. Its perfect for grabbing the attention of your viewers. Choose between 1, 2, 3 or 4 columns, set the background color, widget divider color, activate transparency, a top border or fully disable it on desktop and mobile.

This Is A Custom Widget

This Sliding Bar can be switched on or off in theme options, and can take any widget you throw at it or even fill it with your custom HTML Code. Its perfect for grabbing the attention of your viewers. Choose between 1, 2, 3 or 4 columns, set the background color, widget divider color, activate transparency, a top border or fully disable it on desktop and mobile.