Light-to-moderate cash cattle trade developed in
most areas Thursday afternoon. Although some additional clean-up trade
may develop during the day on Friday, a weaker tone is expected. Live
cattle traded from $108 to $110 per cwt. This is mostly $2 per cwt lower
than last week. Dressed trade in the North was reported at $178 to
$183, mostly $181 to $183 per cwt. This is generally $3 to $4 per cwt
lower than last week as packers were able to focus on fears that further
pressure may develop later in the summer after the Fourth of July
holiday. The sluggish movements in beef values has also eroded plant
margins, causing packers to reduce spending and will likely slow overall
production levels during late June and early July. Futures are expected
mixed to mostly lower with the firm losses in feeder cattle trade
sparking increased underlying weakness. At this point, the market
remains technically stable, with prices still hovering within the wide
sideways trading range seen the last couple months. Attention through
late Friday is expected to also move to the afternoon Cattle on Feed
report. Expectations are mixed ahead of the report. If cattle on feed
and placed numbers come in near estimates, it is likely that the report
will have little market impact.
Sharp losses Thursday sparked underlying market
weakness in all contracts. August futures are now testing three-month
lows once again, as traders try to defend last week's support levels. A
move below $80.62 at the end of the week would likely create additional
underlying liquidation in the complex, adding even more pressure in the
entire market. Traders remain concerned about the growing production
costs to feed the aggressive production levels in the spring and summer
while long-term demand support remains uncertain and based partially on
doing increased business with China. Cash trade remains steady to $1
lower Friday morning with most bids steady. Expected slaughter Friday is
at 468,000 head. Saturday runs are expected at 88,000 head.
#completeherdhealth |
BULL SIDE | BEAR SIDE | ||
1) | Feeder cattle placements in the month of May are expected to slip from year-ago levels. This will help to move the focus away from steady cattle supply increases and may curb long-term beef production levels. | 1) |
Sharp cash cattle losses have
continued to develop late in the week. With cash cattle trade mostly $2
to $4 per cwt lower than last week's levels, increased long-term concern
about summer prices is seen in the entire complex.
|
2) | Underlying holiday beef demand is nearing with traditional support surrounding Fourth of July celebrations and gatherings likely to help support overall market stability. | 2) | Active buyer support in grain trade has created increased liquidation in feeder cattle futures. The triple-digit losses Thursday is likely to spark additional underlying weakness in the entire complex. |
3) |
Continued hope is being placed on
upcoming trade talks with China and is likely to create underlying
market momentum. This may spark some increased noncommercial buying
moving into the complex at the end of the week.
|
3) | Lean hog futures are testing technical support levels of $80.62 per cwt in August futures. A close below these levels Friday would likely spark further liquidation as prices move out of the recent market range and move to new three-month lows. |
4) |
End-of-the-week short-covering is
likely in lean hog trade as traders try to bring renewed stability to
the complex. The afternoon release of May Cold Storage report will also
shed light on overall product movement, which is expected to be
generally positive.
|
4) |
Concerns about the ability to move
pork to China despite the growing demand created by African swine fever
is increasing each day a trade deal with China is not in place. There is
growing uncertainty that the two sides can reach an agreement in the
near future.
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