Klassen: Feeder cattle market feels toppy

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: March 12, 2012

,

Western Canadian feeder cattle prices were steady to $3 per hundredweight lower on average last week. Softer fed cattle prices, along with a stronger Canadian dollar, set a negative tone. U.S. feeder cattle prices were down $2-$4 per hundredweight at major auction barns in the southern U.S. Plains.

General comments from the industry suggest that feedlot operators are starting to back away from the market while buying for replacement heifers remains active.

Red Angus-cross steers averaging 486 pounds sold for $196/cwt in central Alberta; a small group of medium-flesh exotic steers weighting 573 lbs. sold for $179/cwt in the same region. In southern Alberta, Charolais-cross steers averaging 686 pounds were still $167/cwt landed in the feedlot. A feedlot owner in the Lethbridge region reported that a small group of large-frame, medium-flesh, weight-controlled backgrounded exotic age-verified steers weighing 780 lbs. sold for $154/cwt landed in the feedlot.

Read Also

Klassen: Feeder cattle market feels toppy

U.S. livestock: Cattle futures come down from highs

Cattle futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were weaker on Monday, coming down from recent highs.

Alberta packers bought cattle at $115/cwt this past week, down $1/cwt from the first week of March. Feedlot margins are hovering near break-even in Alberta while the U.S. feedlot operator has not experienced positive margins since last April.

Looking forward, fed cattle prices in Alberta need to reach $121/cwt for June given the values on replacement cattle this past winter. There is potential for Alberta feedlots operators to experience $60 to $80 per head losses in May and June, if fed cattle prices stay at the current levels.

Feeder cattle prices are vulnerable to downside pressure because cattle buyers are starting behind the eight ball. Keep in mind there is a very strong seasonal tendency for fed cattle prices to soften from April through July.

Barley prices have risen $10 per tonne in southern Alberta over the past month, increasing the cost per pound gain. Barley stocks are projected to be historically tight at the end of the 2011-12 crop year, which will keep prices firm into the summer.

About the author

Jerry Klassen

Contributor

Jerry Klassen analyzes cattle, feed grain and currency markets for Canadian cattle producers. To subscribe to his weekly market outlook or consulting services, contact him at 204-504-8339.

explore

Stories from our other publications