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Ron Plain: Hog Outlook

Ron Plain and Scott Brown
University of Missouri
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There were few significant changes in this month's USDA price forecasts (WASDE). USDA held steady their forecast for the marketing year average corn price at between $3.20 and $3.80 per bushel. They raised the midpoint of their soybean meal forecast by $10 to $360/ton. USDA cut their prediction of the 2014 average live hog price by 38 cents to $76.22/cwt. Their forecast for 2015 live hog prices is unchanged with an average between $63 and $68/cwt.

Record U.S. pork prices this year are having the expected impact on international trade. Year-over-year pork exports were down 11.9% in October with a large decline in shipments to Japan and China. Pork imports were up 40.2% in October compared to 12 months earlier. The increase was largely due to more pork from Canada. In October, pork exports equaled 18.0% of U.S. pork production and imports equaled 5.1%

During the first 10 months of 2014 pork imports are up 12.9% and pork exports are up 0.4%.

Friday morning's pork cutout value was $92.06/cwt FOB the plants, down 68 cents from the week before, but up $5.52 from a year ago. Loins and hams were lower. Belly prices were higher. The national average negotiated carcass price for direct delivered hogs on the morning report today was $80.54/cwt, down $3.58 from last Friday, but up $2.93 from a year ago. The western corn belt averaged $78.12/cwt on today's morning report. There were no negotiated carcass prices reported this morning for the eastern corn belt or Iowa-Minnesota.

Peoria had a top live price today of $58/cwt. The top price Friday for interior Missouri live hogs was $58.50/cwt which was 75 cents lower than the previous Friday.

This morning's hog carcass price averaged 87.5% of the cutout value.

Hog slaughter this week totaled 2.254 million head, up 0.8% from the week before, but down 2.9% compared to the same week last year. This was the 42nd consecutive week with hog slaughter below the year-earlier level.

The average live slaughter weight of barrows and gilts in Iowa-Minnesota last week, 285.4 pounds, was unchanged from a week earlier and up 3.0 pounds from a year ago. That was the 88th consecutive week with weights above the year-earlier level.

The December lean hog futures contract closed today at $87.52/cwt, up 92 cents for the week. February hog futures ended the week at $83.25/cwt, down $2.37 from the week before. April hogs lost $2.60 this week to close at $84.35/cwt. The May contract ended the week at $89.00/cwt. June hogs closed at $91.15/cwt.

Corn futures were higher this week. The December contract gained 15 cents this week to end at $3.9625 per bushel. March corn settled at $4.075/bu, 13 cents higher than the previous Friday. May corn futures settled at $4.155/bu.

Source: AGEBB


Trending Video

Making budget friendly pig feed on a small livestock farm

Video: Making budget friendly pig feed on a small livestock farm

I am going to show you how we save our farm money by making our own pig feed. It's the same process as making our cattle feed just with a slight adjustment to our grinder/ mixer that makes all the difference. We buy all the feed stuff required to make the total mix feed. Run each through the mixer and at the end of the process we have a product that can be consumed by our pigs.

I am the 2nd generation to live on this property after my parents purchased it in 1978. As a child my father hobby farmed pigs for a couple years and ran a vegetable garden. But we were not a farm by any stretch of the imagination. There were however many family dairy farms surrounding us. So naturally I was hooked with farming since I saw my first tractor. As time went on, I worked for a couple of these farms and that only fueled my love of agriculture. In 2019 I was able to move back home as my parents were ready to downsize and I was ready to try my hand at farming. Stacy and logan share the same love of farming as I do. Stacy growing up on her family's dairy farm and logans exposure of farming/tractors at a very young age. We all share this same passion to grow a quality/healthy product to share with our community. Join us on this journey and see where the farm life takes us.