GENERAL COMMENTS:
It's been a mixed Friday for the market as both live and feeder cattle contracts are trending lower after closing higher Thursday. But the lean hog complex is doing the exact opposite as it found enough support in Thursday's market to keep morale elevated through Friday. Not helping matters in terms of the cattle market's weakness Friday is the sheer fact that corn is trading 11 to 13 cents higher, which is a sizeable jump for the day. December corn is up 11 1/2 cents per bushel and December soybean meal is down $3.10. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 162.71 points.
LIVE CATTLE:
The live cattle complex is trading modestly lower into Friday afternoon as the market looks for support after pushing higher through Thursday's close. October live cattle are down $0.45 at $143.67, December live cattle are down $0.87 at $146.90, and February live cattle are down $0.72 at $150.62. The cash cattle market hasn't seen any more interest develop and it's likely the week's trade is all but done with. Throughout the week, Northern dressed sales have had a range of $225.60 to $233, mostly $228, which is $1.00 lower than last week's weighted average. Southern live cattle have been marked at $143, which is fully steady with last week's weighted averages. As mentioned earlier this week, monitoring not only boxed beef prices is critical in this time but also the sheer volume of sales as packers can balance lower prices with larger sales so long as the opportunity lasts. However, if demand wanes and both prices and sale volumes crater, packers could look to rein back production.
Boxed beef prices are mixed: choice down $1.26 ($244.82) and select up $0.86 ($220.64) with a movement of 47 loads (30.63 loads of choice, 10.13 loads of select, zero loads of trim and 6.39 loads of ground beef).
FEEDER CATTLE:
With the corn complex gaining more and more steam as the day plays on, the feeder cattle market is taking a step back as nearby corn contracts trade 11 to 13 cents higher. Thankfully, at this point the market has support at the plane established earlier this week, which will be critical for the market to maintain if higher prices are to be in the feeder cattle markets in the near future. October feeder cattle are down $1.87 at $175.45, November feeders are down $2.40 at $175.42 and January feeders are down $1.95 at $176.47.
LEAN HOGS:
As the lean hog complex now has had time to thoroughly examine the Quarterly Hogs and Pigs Report, which was released Thursday afternoon, the market has traded higher all Friday. October lean hogs are up $0.22 at $89.67, December lean hogs are up $0.50 at $76.25, and February lean hogs are up $0.15 at $79.20. Pork cutout values closed lower Thursday afternoon, which largely stemmed from the regression in belly prices. Monitoring pork cutout values and demand Friday afternoon will be important for the market as packers could opt to scale back production if demand isn't as lively as they'd like.
The projected CME Lean Hog Index for 9/29/2022 is down $0.23 at $94.91, and the actual index for 9/28/2022 is down $0.46 at $95.14. Hog prices are lower on the Daily Direct Morning Hog Report, down $3.36 with a weighted average of $85.08, ranging from $82.00 to $95.50 on 2,966 head and a five-day rolling average of $89.29. Pork cutouts total 158.43 loads with 134.97 loads of pork cuts and 23.46 loads of trim. Pork cutout values: down $1.31, $97.49.
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