U.S. livestock: Short-covering pares early CME live cattle losses

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Published: September 14, 2015

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(Photo courtesy Canada Beef Inc.)

Chicago | Reuters –– Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle closed higher on Monday after short-covering trumped follow-through selling that initially pressed futures to a 15-month low, traders said.

Spot-October closed up 0.875 cent/lb. at 141.475 cents, and December was 0.8 cent higher at 143.175 cents (all figures US$).

October was further supported by fewer cattle for sale this week and that contract’s discount to the top end of last week’s market-ready (cash) cattle price range.

Last week, cash cattle in the U.S. Plains sold at $139-$142/cwt, compared to $142-$143.50 the week before, said feedlot sources.

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Lower wholesale beef values and uncertainty about cash prices later in the week pulled CME live cattle from session highs.

Monday morning’s wholesale choice beef price (cutout) fell $1.23/cwt, to $234.86, from Friday. Select cuts slipped 22 cents, to $226.51, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.

Monday’s market gain was “not a runaway… The thing that we’re getting backwards is that cash is not leading the way,” said KIS Futures Inc. vice-president Lane Broadbent.

Funds trading CME livestock futures periodically shifted October long positions into back months in a process known as the “roll” by followers of the Standard + Poor’s Goldman Sachs Commodity Index.

Monday was the last official day for the S+P GSCI roll process.

Sell stops, higher corn futures and soft cash feeder cattle prices weighed on CME feeder cattle, with September closing 0.55 cent lower at 200.15 cents.

Cash woes hit hog futures

Plentiful hog supplies that caused the more than two-week slide in cash prices deterred CME lean hog futures buyers, traders said.

Spot October ended down 0.5 cent/lb. at 66.825 cents, and December closed 0.4 cent lower at 62.25.

The government quoted the morning’s average cash hog price in Iowa/Minnesota at $66.85/cwt on light sales volume, 66 cents lower than on Friday.

Some traders sold nearby contracts and simultaneously bought deferred months with the view that farmers will raise fewer hogs later if corn prices remained high.

Still, supermarkets stocking up on product for National Pork Month in October cushioned the lean hog October contract’s fall.

Monday morning’s wholesale pork price was up $1/cwt from Friday, to $85.66, led by $3.11 higher costs for pork bellies, USDA said.

Theopolis Waters reports on livestock markets for Reuters from Chicago.

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