Meat Institute: USDA Continues to Over Regulate Beef and Cattle Markets

Meat Institute issues statement after USDA asks for more information on possible new rules under the Packers and Stockyards Act.

meat
meat
(.)

Following the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) requests for more information on possible new rules under the Packers and Stockyards Act on price discovery in cattle markets, Meat Institute President and CEO Julie Anna Potts made the following statement:

“Biden’s USDA is once again attempting to assert government control over the free market to the detriment of cattle producers, packers and consumers,” Potts says. “This is not about transparency. This is about the government dictating how cattle may be bought and sold.

Potts says transparency already required in these markets and cattle producers have received record high prices for several years.

“When USDA says it wants to ‘enhance fairness’ in cattle markets, they mean pick winners and losers. They want to end the use of Alternative Marketing Arrangements (AMAs) and force producers and packers into the cash market. AMAs are a livestock producer-driven innovation that rewards producers who are developing value-added products by investing in their herds’ genetics and other traits, improving quality, or raising cattle using certain sustainability practices. Despite the Administration’s belief otherwise, cattle production operations are not all the same and the cattle they produce are not one-size-fits all. Moving back in time to a commodity cattle market will reduce competition, innovation, and quality, ultimately hurting the entire industry. Livestock producers ought to be rewarded for their innovation in the marketplace,” Potts says.

“AMAs offer producers the very benefits USDA says it wants to support: choice, flexibility, transparency and, yes, even higher prices. And most importantly, AMAs provide consumers with more choices and a consistent supply of higher quality beef at stable prices,” Potts says.

“The Meat Institute remains opposed to all of the Biden Administration’s proposed and final rules changes under the Packers and Stockyards Act because they are outside the scope of USDA’s authority,” Potts adds.

Background on Transparency in Beef and Cattle Markets
There is robust price discovery in the cattle and beef markets. Congress established and USDA administers the Livestock Mandatory Reporting Act (LMR) program to facilitate open, transparent price discovery and provide all market participants, both large and small, with comparable levels of market information for slaughter cattle and beef, as well as other species.

Under LMR, packers must report to AMS daily the prices they pay to procure cattle, and other information, including slaughter data for cattle harvested during a specified time period and with net prices, actual weights, dressing percentages, percent of beef grading Choice, and price ranges, and then AMS publishes the anonymized data.

AMS publishes 24 daily and 20 weekly cattle reports each week. Weekly reports start Monday afternoon and end the next Monday morning. These reports cover time periods, regions, and activities and the data include actual cattle prices.

Further, packers report all original sale beef transactions in both volume and price through the Daily Boxed Beef Report. This data is reported twice daily, at 11:00 a.m. and at 3:00 p.m. Central Time. The morning report covers market activity since 1:30 p.m. of the prior business day until 9:30 a.m. of the business day. The afternoon report is cumulative, including all market activity in the morning plus all additional transactions between 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., and is on the USDA DataMart website. The boxed beef report covers both individual beef item sales and beef cutout values and current volumes, both of which are derived from the individual beef item sales data.

In 2022, Congress appropriated funds for AMS to create a Cattle Contracts Library Pilot Program to increase market transparency. The pilot program has packers submit contract and volume information to AMS using a series of data collection forms. This information is added to a searchable database.

Additional Resources:
AMA Fact Sheet
US Cattle Lifecycle and Supply Chain
Packers and Stockyards Rules Changes Fact Sheet

Drovers_Logo_No-Tagline (1632x461)
Drovers_Logo_No-Tagline (1632x461)
Read Next
As fed cattle weights hit historic highs, a surplus of fat trim is creating an unprecedented need for lean blending beef, pushing cull cow values to new records.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alert
Get News & Markets App