U.S. livestock: CME live cattle plunge limit down to two-year low

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: September 23, 2015

, , , ,

(Photo courtesy Canada Beef Inc.)

Chicago | Reuters — Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle futures on Wednesday tumbled to a two-year low, and by their three-cent-per-pound daily price limit, amid a seasonal slowdown in beef demand and lower expectations for cash prices this week, traders said.

Spot-October and December respectively closed at 133.225 and 135.75 cents/lb., which are also their new contract lows (all figures US$). CME will expand live cattle’s trading limit to 4.5 cents on Thursday following Wednesday’s limit-down settlement.

Wednesday morning’s wholesale choice beef price slumped $3.79, to $218.98/cwt, from Tuesday. Select cuts sagged $1.84, to $214.95, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.

Read Also

Photo: Getty Images Plus

Alberta crop conditions improve: report

Varied precipitation and warm temperatures were generally beneficial for crop development across Alberta during the week ended July 8, according to the latest provincial crop report released July 11.

Market-ready (cash) cattle bids surfaced in Kansas at $130/cwt, with no response from sellers, feedlot sources said. No bids or asking prices were reported elsewhere in the U.S. Plains, they said.

Last week, cash cattle sold at $135 to $136/cwt.

Beef demand is in the midst of a post-Labour Day lull while facing competition from comparatively cheap pork and chicken, said traders.

Fallen beef cutout values trimmed packer margins, but remained in the black due to lower prices paid in recent weeks for record-heavy cattle, they said.

“These guys (feedlots) are caught with heavyweight cattle, and there’s nothing to do but move them at the going price,” said Archer Financial Services broker Dennis Smith.

CME feeder cattle September, which will expire on Thursday, was guided by the exchange’s feeder cattle index for Sept. 21 at 196.91 cents.

Live cattle future’s selloff sank remaining feeder cattle contracts by their 4.5-cent/lb. daily price limit, which will be expanded to 6.75 cents on Thursday.

September feeder cattle closed at 194.95 cents/lb., down 0.75 cent. October and November finished at 182.375 and 179.375 cents, their new contract lows.

Hogs slip on cash, pork prices

Lower cash and wholesale pork values spawned profit-taking that beat back early-session CME lean hog advances, traders said.

Spot-October hogs closed 0.45 cent/lb. lower at 70.55 cents, and December down 0.525 cent, to 64.225.

Wednesday morning’s wholesale pork price was at $81.77/cwt, $1.73 lower than on Tuesday, led by the $7.59 drop in pork belly costs, USDA said.

USDA reported the morning’s Iowa/Minnesota average cash hog price at $68.87/cwt, down $1.36 from Tuesday in light volume.

Investors were cautious ahead of the government’s quarterly hog report scheduled for release on Friday.

Theopolis Waters reports on livestock markets for Reuters from Chicago.

explore

Stories from our other publications