Cattle and beef markets continue to show good and improving strength into 2022. The opening weeks of February communicate potential tightening of, most notably, feeder animal supplies into the summer. Likewise, the strong volumes of fed slaughter suggest that the substantial volume of long-fed cattle are being worked through. All this is reasonably bullish news for cattle markets and a fairly substantial change from the past three years of large numbers and abundant supplies at the farm and ranch level. These abundant supplies have compounded the market dynamics also attributable to supply chain disruptions experienced since the beginning of COVID-19 in the U.S. 2022 gives the appearance of change.
Feeder cattle movements are reasonably strong through January and February. Prices likewise remain strong as cattle feeding organizations are more aggressively chasing available animals and lighter animals. This is in the face of Cattle on Feed reports that have communicated reasonably strong placements through the fall, for certain placements have not backed off. Dry weather in the Northern plains and in the Mountain West, as well as deteriorating wheat pasture conditions, are pushing animals to the feeding sector – which is all too pleased to pay better than $2 a pound for five-weight animals. It is anticipated that February’s report will reveal the extent of placements and reenforce the likelihood of much shorter placements toward May.
Federally inspected daily fed steer and heifer has been remarkable during February. January revealed many problem days with 86,000 to 89,000 head slaughtered. Market watchers had expected more as certainly those animals were available. Daily slaughter in February has routinely been greater than 90,000 head and some days pushing 96,000. I anticipate the March Cattle on Feed report, which shows February marketings and placements, will reveal a drop the number of cattle on feed over 120 or over 150 days; however, the normal seasonal pattern, which is an increase, so an inventory returning to more normal levels.
While tightening supplies are being revealed, the demand side of the beef market picture is nothing short of incredible. Strong exports relative to imports, headline retail beef prices, huge retail and packer margins are all evidence of this demand. With the downstream market conditions such as they are, then it is difficult to be bullish there. What seems more reasonable, is that retail and packer margins may shrink and improve the prices at the fed and feeder level. It will be interesting to see what these margins become through 2022. I believe we do not understand the labor or operating or shipping realities.
However, certainly all is not good news and especially for feeder cattle and calves. The fall run of calves has persisted because of the lack of forage and price of it and other feedstuffs. December corn futures hover at $6 per bushel some 10 months from expiration. This is one of the strongest earliest prices with which I am familiar. But it’s hard to argue with that trend underlying that contract. Speaking of … (see Table 1)
The markets
What does the technical picture say? The long-term pattern is persistent on the charts. There are uptrends in place, and resistance planes are being broken as most live cattle contracts push into life of contract highs. But again, the cattle markets do not chart like the grain markets. Cattle do not jump to new higher levels like soybeans do. Rather, there are persistence moves higher with periodic sharp down moves. Live cattle contracts have trends in place and have broken resistance – buy signals. However, feeder cattle contracts are holding at resistance and less so on more deferred contracts – sell signals. Substantial improvements in feeder cattle prices will take topping of the feed grain and oilseed markets.
This article originally appeared in the Feb. 21, 2022, Livestock Marketing Information Center’s In the Cattle Markets newsletter.