Derrell S. Peel,
Oklahoma State University Extension Livestock Marketing Specialist
The Newsletter
From the
Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service
October 6, 2014
“Feeder
and fed cattle prices are at or near all time highs and are poised to keep
moving higher. Both Feeder and Live cattle futures suggest that higher
prices are yet to come. In several recent meetings and conversations with
producers, I am seeing a couple of reactions to the current situation.
There seems to be an overall feeling of disbelief or a sense that there is
another shoe to fall. The basic question seems to be one of “Is this for
real?”. Given everything we have been through in recent years and the
amount of volatility in most input and output markets, such hesitancy is
understandable. It is easy to remember corn and wheat markets in 2008
which soared to astronomical heights for a brief period of time. Are
cattle markets in the same situation: set for a wild but short-lived ride into
the stratosphere?”
The
preceding paragraph was taken from an article that I wrote in January of
2011. I stumbled across it recently and realized that it applies to an
even greater extent today with a market situation that is significantly
different than when the original article was written. Feeder cattle
prices today are nearly double (up over 90 percent) the level when the question
was posed in 2011. Fed cattle prices are up over 50 percent from early
2011. No one knew in January, 2011 that the beef industry would suffer
tremendously with drought impacts into 2014 that would take an already tight
supply situation to extreme levels and provoke the current unimaginable
production and market situation.
It
appeared in early 2011 that the beef cattle industry was poised for herd
expansion with cattle inventories already lower than intended by the
industry. Instead, we find ourselves in 2014 with the beef cow herd down
another 6 percent from the 2011 level. Though herd expansion has likely
started in 2014, it will take another three years to recover the 1.87 million
head of beef cows lost since 2011. Additional expansion beyond that
level is likely but will depend on domestic and international market conditions
towards the end of the decade. The prospects for herd expansion for much
of the rest of the decade suggest that cattle prices are likely to grind higher
yet from current record levels before peaking and working lower towards the end
of the decade. I’m hearing many producers and others repeating the adage
that “high prices cure high prices” and they do; but in the case of the beef
industry it will likely take most of the rest of the decade for that to
happen. The beef industry does not work like crop production in which
major production adjustments can occur in a matter of one crop year.
Heifer retention will make tight cattle supplies tighter for a couple of years
before any resulting production increase hits the market. The current situation
pretty much ensures a four to six year recovery process with supply driven
price strength for much of that process.
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