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Klassen: Grain strength limits feeder cattle upside

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Published: January 13, 2013

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Western Canadian feeder cattle prices were steady to $2 per hundredweight (cwt) higher last week but firm feedgrain values tempered the upside potential.

Local auction market volumes were rather light in post-holiday mode. The U.S. market continued to show further strength, trading $3-$5/cwt higher on average in the Midwest. Heavier replacement cattle were leading the advance, with feedlots pushing to hit the April marketing period. Feedlot managers are fairly optimistic factoring in higher fed cattle prices for the spring period.

A small group of mixed steer calves averaging 550 pounds sold for $155/cwt in east-central Alberta. Red Angus cross steers with medium flesh weighing 650 lbs. sold for $148/cwt landed in southern Alberta. In southwestern Manitoba, a mixed group of 700- to 800-lb. steers averaged $135/cwt. Prices were a little softer in Saskatchewan, with the same weight range averaging $140 in the central region.

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Volumes are expected to pick up over the next several weeks as early backgrounded calves from last fall come on the market. This will be a truer test of prices. Alberta packers were buying fed cattle in the range of $116-$117/cwt, marginally lower than late December.

U.S. carcass weights are running 23 lbs. above year-ago levels and despite seven per cent fewer cattle on feed compared to last year; first-quarter beef production may actually exceed year-ago levels. The focus is turning to consumer buying behaviour, which usually moves through a seasonal contraction in January and February and then surges in March. Wholesale beef prices were marginally lower this week. Friday’s U.S. Department of Agriculture report was considered friendly for corn which will keep feedgrain prices in Western Canada near record highs.

Feedlots appear to be factoring in higher fed cattle prices for the spring period, which has enhanced current feeder cattle values. The feeder market is famous for "biased optimism" despite the softer nearby economics in feedlot margins. I’m expecting feeder cattle prices to slowly trend higher throughout the winter period. Consumer disposable income needs to increase to justify record-high fed prices in late March and April.

— 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.

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