But while the favorable grain stocks reading provided sound fundamental justification for a rally, lower corn prices have not been enough to sustain higher feeder cattle prices. In fact, feeder cattle prices have retreated to levels lower than before the Grain Stocks-induced run. Last Friday, for example, the April Feeder Cattle contract closed at $134.02 - a life-of-contract low.
The steady decline in feeder cattle prices since the beginning of the year reflects the simple fact that cattle feeders have been losing money - lots of it. Calf prices last fall reflected expectations of sharply higher fed cattle prices this year as supplies tightened and prices rose in response. Supplies may have tightened, but prices haven't done too much rising.
The 5-Area weekly weighted average fed steer price worked out to $128.12 in the first week of 2013. It has exceeded that level exactly once since then - hitting $128.29 three weeks ago - and has averaged an extremely disappointing $125.87 for the year. With cost of gain in the vicinity of $1.25 per pound and fed cattle prices of $125 per hundredweight (cwt), feeder cattle that went on feed at $145 or better don't work out too well. Great quantities of red ink have been spilled in the cattle feeding business this winter and early spring.
Cattle feeders are increasingly unwilling and/or unable to pay up for calves while betting on a stronger fed cattle market down the road. Live cattle futures both reflect and reinforce this pessimism: there is not a 2013 contract on the board trading above $127 to start this week.
It is against this mark that feeder cattle bids are being formulated. Last week at Oklahoma City, feeder cattle in the 750- to 800-pound range averaged around $130. We should be getting in the ballpark of a feeder cattle price that will work; however, there remains considerable uncertainty about feed prices.
Corn prices have not yet recovered much from their drop following the grain stocks report, but the market will remain very touchy until this year's crop is much closer to being assured. For now, cool, wet weather is fueling talk of late planting - not the kind of talk that inspires confidence in the feeder cattle market.
– John D. Anderson is a deputy chief economist for the American Farm Bureau Federation. This appeared in the In the Cattle Markets e-newsletter for Livestock Marketing Information Center.