GENERAL COMMENTS
Moderate trading developed Friday afternoon in
parts of the Northern tier of cattle feeding country. Most dressed sales
were marked at $170, $2 lower than last week. On a live basis, steers
and heifers in Nebraska and Iowa sold at mostly $107, $2 lower than last
Friday. On the other hand, the South remains at a standstill. We can
only assume that between contracts and formulas, packers in Kansas and
Texas have sufficient numbers to get next week's kill started. The
National hog base closed off $0.12 compared with the Prior Day
settlement ($34 to $38, weighted average $37.57). From Friday to Friday,
livestock futures scored the following changes: Aug LC up $0.55; Oct LC
up $2.07; Sep FC up $1.98; Oct FC up $2.40; Oct LH off $1.35; Dec LH up
$2.18. Corn futures closed 8 to 10 cents higher, supported by
late-month short-covering and commercial-buying. The stock market closed
on a mixed basis with the Dow down 22 points and the Nasdaq up 21
points.
LIVE CATTLE
Futures closed mostly moderately lower, off 10
to 300. Spot August expired down the limit at high noon, going off the
board at $106.80. New spot October will start trade next Tuesday, still
trapped in a lateral trading range that has persisted since early April.
October has been unable to master overhead resistance near 110 to 111
for months. Beef cutouts: lower to sharply lower (choice, $209.69 off
$2.04, select $201.27 off $0.94) on light-to-moderate demand and
offerings (32 loads of choice cuts, 27 loads of select cuts, zero loads
of trimmings, 24 loads of coarse grinds).
TUESDAY'S CASH CATTLE CALL:
Steady to $2 lower. Post-holiday activity will
be limited on Tuesday to the collection of new showlists. We expect
ready numbers to be somewhat larger than late August. Positively, cattle
buyers will take up the chore of funding the first full slaughter week
of September.
FEEDER CATTLE:
Futures closed sharply lower, off 72 to 147.
With the exception of spot September all feeder issues settled with
triple-digit losses. Commercial buying is no doubt becoming more
cautious given deteriorating margins. Furthermore, the feeder board was
probably pressured by Friday's strong rally in the corn market. CME cash
feeder index: 08/30: $149.98, off $0.11.
LEAN HOGS:
Futures closed mostly moderately higher, up 30
to 130. Friday's late-week bounce was supported by short-covering and
ideas that post-Labor Day fundamentals could temporarily stabilize.
Price history is below examples of improving cash prices in the early
fall period, especially in years that saw serious price pressure through
the month of August. 2018 certainly seems to qualify in that regard.
Yet the ability of late third-quarter pork demand to absorb historically
large tonnage could be the key. Pork cutout: $67.21 (FOB Plant) up
$0.46. CME cash lean 08/29: $45.85, off $0.60 (DTN Projected lean index
for 08/30: $45.63, off $0.22.
TUESDAY'S CASH HOG CALL:
Steady. Look for early week bids to be near steady when trade resumes on Tuesday.
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