Farms.com Home   News

Strength in the fed cattle market continues

In Manitoba, feeder steer and heifer prices were mixed.

The 701 to 800-pound feeder steers saw an increase of $11.25 cwt for an average price of $282.50 cwt, while the 401 to 500-pounders dropped $5.50 cwt for an average price of $351 cwt.

Feeder heifer prices for the 401 to 500-pound animals were up $34 cwt for an average price of $317.50 cwt, while the largest price drop was $17.50 cwt for the 701-800 pound animals for an average price of $224 cwt. 

D1-D2 Cows ranged from $131.17 cwt to $150.83 cwt for an average price of $141 cwt an increase of $3.25 cwt from the previous week, while D3 slaughter cows were up 46 cents for an average price of $120.83 cwt.

Slaughter Bulls were up $3.29 cwt ranging from lows of $143.83 cwt, to top out at $ 169.92 cwt for an average price of $156.88 cwt.

In Saskatchewan, the number of cattle moving through the auction ring was down with seeding operations now in full swing.

 Overall, feed steer prices were mixed with prices ranging from $372 cwt for the 400-500lb category to $254 cwt for the 900+ lb weight category.

Feeder heifer prices were down ranging from  $319.25 cwt for the 400-500lb weight category to $248 cwt for the 800+lb weight category.

In Alberta, fed cattle prices have continued to establish record highs.

The Canfax price for Alberta fed steers reported on May 19 was $237.11 per cwt, up $5.66 per cwt compared to the previous week when they averaged $231.45 per cwt.

 The price of D2 slaughter cows dropped $1.87 cwt from the week prior for an average price of $147.83 per cwt, while the price of D3 slaughter cows was unchanged at an average of $131.90 cwt.

The rail price for non-fed cattle in Alberta ranged between $285.00-295.000 per cwt, up $5.00 on both ends from the previous week.

Source : Steinbach Online

Trending Video

MINI SERIES: Critical Biosecurity Risks in Swine Production Presented by Lanxess

Video: MINI SERIES: Critical Biosecurity Risks in Swine Production Presented by Lanxess

we’re joined by Dr. Gisele Ravagnani from Lanxess to discuss one of the most overlooked yet critical biosecurity risks in modern swine production: transport. From cleaning and disinfection challenges to downtime protocols and practical on-farm strategies, this conversation explores where biosecurity gaps still exist — and what producers can do immediately to reduce risk. A short but important discussion focused on protecting herd health, improving protocols, and strengthening modern swine production systems.