Profit Tracker: Modest Profits Continue For Cattle And Hogs

Profit tracker
Profit tracker
(FJ)

Cattle and hog finishing margins are both positive for the fifth consecutive week.

Cattle feeding margins posted average profits of $41 per head last week, $95 per head less than the previous week. Cash prices for fed cattle declined nearly $3 per cwt. on average to $104 per cwt., but margins held positive due to significantly lower feeder cattle prices calculated in closeouts, according to the Sterling Beef Profit Tracker.

Cattle marketed last week were purchased last spring at prices diminished significantly by the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. Feeder steer prices factored into last week’s Profit Tracker were $129.31 per cwt., which is $12.30 per cwt. lower than last year. Those lower feeder cattle prices produced an average breakeven of $101.50 for cattle marketed last week. The previous week’s breakeven price was  $97 per cwt., and a year ago the breakeven was $112 per cwt. A year ago cattle feeders lost an average of $25 per head.

Packer margins declined $10 per head last week, though profits remain at $257 per head. Last week’s beef cutout price averaged $206 per cwt., a decline of $3 per cwt.

Feedyard margins reported by the Sterling Profit Tracker, Sterling Marketing, Vale, Ore., are calculated on a cash basis only with no adjustment for risk management practices.

(Note: The Beef and Pork Profit Trackers are intended only as a benchmark for the average cash costs of feeding cattle and hogs.)

Sterling Marketing projects 2020 feedyard margins to average $10 profit per head, while annual packer profits are projected at $314 per head. Cash cow-calf margins for 2020 are projected at $57 per calf.

Farrow-to-finish pork producers have seen their margins improve this fall with rising lean carcass prices.  Last week saw average closeouts post $20 per head profits, about steady with the previous week, and $2 per head less than a month ago.

Lean hog carcass prices traded at $66.21 per cwt., $0.08 per cwt. less than the previous week. Lean carcass prices are $0.28 per cwt. higher than a month ago, and $9.27 higher than the same week a year ago. A year ago pork producers lost an average of $16 per head.

Pork packers saw average profits of $59 per head last week, about steady with the previous week.

Sterling Marketing projects 2020 annual per head losses for pork producers at $18 per head, while projected packer profits are $59 per head.

(Editor’s note: Sterling Marketing is a private, independent beef and pork consulting firm not associated with any packing company or livestock feeding enterprise.)

Related stories:

Cash Cattle Lower, COF Inventory Higher

 

Latest News

The Pros and Cons of Multispecies Grazing
The Pros and Cons of Multispecies Grazing

Kevin Lynch shares the pros and cons of multispecies grazing as well as what beginners need to consider in Season 7, Episode 16 of the Casual Cattle Conversations podcast.

Moving Into the Next Stage of Panhandle Wildfire Recovery
Moving Into the Next Stage of Panhandle Wildfire Recovery

Donation intake closing as distribution continues for AgriLife Extension-operated Animal Supply Points.

CAB Insider: Prime Pops for Annual Quality Peak
CAB Insider: Prime Pops for Annual Quality Peak

Over the past five weeks the combined Prime and Choice carcasses harvested totaled 84.7%, a six percentage point increase over the September low of 78.7%.

Goodbye, El Niño. Hello, La Niña? The Big Transition to La Niña is Already Underway
Goodbye, El Niño. Hello, La Niña? The Big Transition to La Niña is Already Underway

There's now a 60% chance La Niña will develop between June and August and an 85% chance it's in effect by November 2024 to January 2025, according to NOAA.

John Deere Dream Job: Brock Purdy Leads Chief Tractor Officer Search
John Deere Dream Job: Brock Purdy Leads Chief Tractor Officer Search

John Deere is seeking its first ever Chief Tractor Officer with a little help from a new friend - 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy.

Profit Tracker: Major Shift in Feed Costs Boosts Livestock Margins
Profit Tracker: Major Shift in Feed Costs Boosts Livestock Margins

Cattle and hog feeders are benefitting from dramatically lower grain and feed costs this year while live animal sale prices are higher. Profit margins for both species have doubled in the past month.