Your Reading List

Klassen: Feeder market sets new records

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 16, 2014

,

Western Canadian feeder cattle prices set new record highs at most auction barns last week. It appears that pen closeouts are profitable by approximately $200/head and feedlot operators are anxious to reload. Buying interest for grassers is also starting to step forward and backgrounding operators were actively buying lighter weight cattle, lifting prices for calves and feather-light categories.

Despite softer wholesale beef prices, Alberta packers were buying fed cattle at $138 per hundredweight (cwt), setting a stronger tone to the feeder complex. Canadian and U.S. year-to-date beef production is running nine per cent behind year-ago levels and the beef pipeline remains relatively thin. Until we see the slaughter pace increase, the fed market is expected to remain firm supporting the feeding margin structure and prices for replacement cattle.

Read Also

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago.

U.S. grains: Soybeans rise on China demand hopes; corn and wheat rebound

Chicago Board of Trade soybean, corn and wheat futures rose on Monday on signs of progress towards the end of a record-long U.S. government shutdown, along with expectations of a revival of U.S. soybean exports to China, analysts said.

A group of 110 black steers weighing 691 pounds sold for a whopping $191/cwt in southern Alberta. A similar-sized group weighing just under 850 lbs. sold for $171/cwt at the same sale. In central Alberta, Charolais-cross steers weighing 770 lbs. sold for $181/cwt. Lighter-weight mixed red and black steers weighing 550 lbs. sold for $215/cwt.

The feeder market has moved into a new price range over the past month due to the current feeding margin structure. However, the break-even prices on current replacements cattle are in the range of $135 to $138/cwt. Feedlot operators are counting on the fed market to remain stable into the summer months. This is very hard to justify given the fact that the June live cattle futures are trading at a $9 discount to the April contract.

Feed barley prices jumped late in the week to $168 per tonne in the Lethbridge area, up $10 from seven days earlier. Without going into detail, the Statistics Canada Dec. 31 stocks report suggested the 2013 barley yields may have been overstated. The barley market appears to have stabilized for the time being and costs per pound gain will be slightly higher than earlier anticipated, which will temper the upside in the feeder market.

– Jerry Klassen is a commodity market analyst in Winnipeg and maintains an interest in the family feedlot in southern Alberta. He writes an in-depth biweekly commentary, Canadian Feedlot and Cattle Market Analysis, for feedlot operators in Canada. He can be reached by email at [email protected] for questions or comments.

About the author

Jerry Klassen

Jerry Klassen

Jerry Klassen graduated from the University of Alberta in 1996 with a degree in Agriculture Business. He has over 25 years of commodity trading and analytical experience working with various grain companies in all aspects of international grain merchandising. From 2010 through 2019, he was manager of Canadian operations for Swiss based trading company GAP SA Grains and Products ltd. Throughout his career, he has travelled to 37 countries and from 2017-2021, he was Chairman of the Canadian Grain and Oilseed Exporter Association. Jerry has a passion for farming; he owns land in Manitoba and Saskatchewan; the family farm/feedlot is in Southern Alberta. Since 2009, he has used the analytical skills to provide cattle and feed grain market analysis for feedlot operators in Alberta and Ontario. For speaking engagements or to subscribe to the Canadian Feedlot and Cattle Market Analysis, please contact him at 204 504 8339 or see the website www.resilcapital.com.

explore

Stories from our other publications