Farms.com Home   News

Record-High Prices and a Downside Risk Summary

By Stephen R. Koontz

The first quarter of the calendar year is typically soft for cattle and beef markets. But not this year. Live cattle futures and cash liveweights have traded above $2 per pound. Nebraska and Iowa-Minnesota have been the strongest regional markets in the 5-Area report. With the information in the now-annual USDA Cattle report from 1/31, the supply side of the market outlook for 2025 is fairly straightforward. Tight supplies are here to stay and there is no substantial evidence of herd building. When herd building does commence then heifers in the feeder mix will be reduced, and this will further tighten supplies.

In such a market, what are the downside risks? This is the question I’ve been getting in outlook forums for the past month. Only one downside risk is supply-related. Carcass weights remain substantial and the average steer weight was 962 pounds the peak week in January. The prior high was two weeks at 960 pounds last year. The pattern in heifer weights is the same. It will be interesting, and important, to see the magnitude of any seasonal decline in weights through the spring. How much of the 40-pound increase based on the same week of the year prior persists? With lower corn prices and longer feeding periods then heavy weights will persist. But how heavy and what are the possible further increases? But I am doubtful there will be surprises here.

The surprises will be in the margins and on the demand side. Packer margins have been tight for several years and there is little in the supply outlook to imply relief. The surprise will likely be reduced packing capacity sometime in the next several years. Which plants and what regions? The smallest plants in the regions with the tightest supplies. It will be interesting to see what the resiliency of the processing food system discussion transitions into. Packing capacity is overbuilt for the cattle market we will see during three to five years.

Market outlook talks for the prior three to five years have mentioned very little about completing meat prices. High-priced feed grains are more difficult for those industries. Until the January Crop production report, we saw substantially lower costs of production. Regardless, the cost of protein production is much lower than in prior years. At some point, pork margins will improve, and avian influenza will be mitigated. The production of competing meats will increase then and pressure persistently high beef prices.

My recommendation to cow-calf producers is to take the time to learn and get comfortable with LRP and options. Forward selling at record-high prices is probably not a bad thing to do. Figure out what you are most comfortable doing and importantly explaining to business partners. The next several years are likely to be rather forgiving – but still with substantial downside risk. And I am sure I haven’t mentioned something that will reveal itself to be important in the above list.

Source : osu.edu

Trending Video

Is China Buying US Soybeans + USDA Nov 14th Crop Report could be “Game Changing”

Video: Is China Buying US Soybeans + USDA Nov 14th Crop Report could be “Game Changing”


After a week of a U.S./China trade truce, markets/trade is skeptical that we have not seen a signed agreement nor heard much from China or seen any details. There are rumors that China is buying soybean futures & not the physical. Trust in Trump?
12 MMT of U.S. soybean purchases by China by year-end is better than 0 but we all need to give it more time and give it a chance to unfold. China did lower the tariffs on Ag and is buying U.S. wheat and sorghum.
U.S. supreme court could rule against Trumps tariffs, but the Trump administration does have a plan B.
U.S. government shutdown is now the longest in history at 38 days.
But despite a U.S. government shutdown we will be getting a USDA November crop report next Friday and it could be “game changing.” If the USDA provides a bullish surprise with lower U.S. corn and soybean yields and ending stocks that are lower than expected both corn and soybean futures will break out above their ceilings at $4.35/bu and $11.35/bu respectively.
The funds continued their selling in live and feeder cattle futures on continued fears that the Trump administration want to lower U.S. beef prices. The fundamentals have not changed, only market psychology has.
Stocks markets continue to worry about a weak U.S. job market, but you can blame ChatGPT for that. In the future, we will have a more efficient, productive and growing economy with a higher unemployment rate until we have more skilled AI workers.
After 34 new record highs in the S & P 500 and 124 new records in the NASDAQ in 2025 we are back to a correction and investor profit taking as AI valuations may have gotten too stretched near-term ahead of NVDA’s 3rd quarter earnings announcement on Nov. 19th. But this is not an AI bubble.
75% of Tesla shareholders approved a $1 trillion pay package for Elon Musk!
It has rained in South America in the last 7 days, but both the American and European models agree that Central Brazil remains dry in the next 14-days!