Profit Tracker: Beef Packer Losses Largest since 2017

.
.
(FJ)

The pendulum continues swinging toward cattle feeders as cash prices jumped $3 last week and left packers with their largest negative margins in nearly six years. Average cattle feeding margins were estimated at $165 per head the week ending Nov. 26, 2022, according to the Sterling Beef Profit Tracker. Those average margins were up $41 per head from the previous week.

Beef packer margins were estimated at a $28 per head loss, the largest per head loss for packers since Jan. 2017, according to Sterling’s database. That compares with packer profits of $488 per head the same week a year ago.

Last week’s Choice beef cutout averaged $251.23 per cwt., down $1.86 from the previous week and down $18.81 per cwt. from a year ago.

Costs associated with finishing cattle have increased dramatically since April. The cattle sold last week carried a total feed cost of $597 per head, which is 23% higher than the $465 feed costs for cattle sold the same week a year ago. The Beef and Pork Profit Trackers are calculated by Sterling Marketing, Vale, Oregon.

Cattle marketed last week had a breakeven of $144.63 per cwt., while cattle placed on feed last week have a breakeven of $151.69 per cwt. Cattle placed last week are calculated to have a purchase price for 750-800 lb. feeder steers at $174.62 per cwt., and feed costs of $590 per head. The feeder steer price is 13% higher than last year.

The estimated total cost for finishing a steer last week was $2,024 per head, up 15% from last year’s estimate of $1,725 per head.

Cattle slaughter totaled an estimated 581,000 674,000 head, about 14,000 head more than the same week last year. Packing plant capacity utilization was estimated at 78.1% compared to 90.6% the previous week and 77.9% last year.

Farrow-to-finish hog producers found profits of $8 per head last week, up about $6 per head from the previous week, and up $52 per head compared to last year’s $44 per head losses. Lean carcass prices averaged $88.20 per cwt., up $0.47 per cwt. from the previous week and up $30.77 from last year (35%).

Pork packers saw losses of about $3 per head, or $10 per head less than the previous week and $53 lower than the same week a year ago. Hog slaughter was estimated at 2.223 million head, down 376,000 head from the previous week and down 31,000 head from last year.

Pork packer capacity utilization was estimated at 82.7% compared to 96.7% the previous week and 84.3% last year.

(Note: The Sterling Beef Profit Tracker calculates an average beef cutout value for the week in its estimates for feedyard and packer margins. Other prices in the weekly Profit Tracker also are calculated weekly averages. Feedyard margins are calculated on a cash basis only with no adjustment for risk management practices. The Beef and Pork Profit Trackers are intended only as a benchmark for the average cash costs of feeding cattle and hogs. Sterling Marketing is a private, independent beef and pork consulting firm not associated with any packing company or livestock feeding enterprise.)

 

Latest News

Cattle Break Again on HPAI News: Corn Follows Wheat Higher, Soybeans Fall on Weak Exports
Cattle Break Again on HPAI News: Corn Follows Wheat Higher, Soybeans Fall on Weak Exports

Cattle futures plunge again on HPAI news but Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek says cash is holding together. Hogs fall with cattle. Corn follows wheat but may not take out the top of the trading range.

DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones
DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones

Building on the Agras drone line, the T50 offers improved efficiency for larger-scale growing operations, while the lightweight T25 is designed to be more portable for smaller fields.

New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery
New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery

A New Jersey woman fighting for her life received an incredible gift from a pig last month at Massachusetts General Hospital. 

AgDay Markets Now: Darin Newsom Says Wheat Ends Higher but Grain Rally May be Losing Steam
AgDay Markets Now: Darin Newsom Says Wheat Ends Higher but Grain Rally May be Losing Steam

Wheat ends higher for a fifth day but Darin Newsom with Barchart thinks the rally has just about run its course and that is true for corn and soybeans as well. And HPAI headlines sink cattle...again.

Canadian Competition Bureau Has Major Concerns About Proposed Bunge/Viterra Merger
Canadian Competition Bureau Has Major Concerns About Proposed Bunge/Viterra Merger

Canada’s Competition Bureau said it had identified major competition concerns around the proposed merger between U.S. grains merchant Bunge and Glencore-backed Viterra.

Wheat Higher for Fifth Day, While Corn and Soybeans Take a Break from the Rally: Livestock Fall
Wheat Higher for Fifth Day, While Corn and Soybeans Take a Break from the Rally: Livestock Fall

Grains end mixed with wheat higher for the fifth consecutive day. However, corn and soybeans don't follow. Darin Newsom, Barchart, discusses if the fund short covering rally is about done?