Oct.
23, 2009
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information contact:
Miranda Reiman, Certified Angus
Beef LLC Industry Information Specialist, at 308-784-2294 or MReiman@certifiedangusbeef.com
Traits
correlated with grid premiums
When you
get a bonus on grid cattle, sometimes it’s easier to count your blessings than
to ask why.
But Tom
Brink, senior vice president for Five Rivers Cattle Feeding, says taking a look
at discounts and premiums can help you get more of the latter. Tapping into
their database, Brink analyzed more than 300,000 cattle records for
correlations with grid components. The results are based on a handful of
value-based marketing options that mirror those popular in the industry.
“Southern”
cattle sold in Kansas and Texas were compared to “northern” cattle in Colorado
and Nebraska to show regional differences.
“The
South is almost always starved for quality grade,” he says. “Because of that,
when we have those southern cattle that do grade, it’s pretty easy for them to
earn a sizeable grid premium.”
USDA
Prime and Choice grade had a solid correlation of 0.6 to earning grid premiums
in the South.
“That’s a
very strong positive relationship, the strongest you see of all the different traits
looked at,” he says. But that drops to 0.35 in the north.
“It’s
still meaningful, that’s for sure,” Brink says, noting the moderate
correlation. It’s topped by bonuses for yield grade (YG) 1s and 2s at 0.39 and
discounts for heavies and YG 4s and 5s, both at -0.46, strongly negative.
“We
struggle a little more with heavies and yield grade as an industry in the
northern geographies, so that shows up on the negative side,” he says.
In the
South, Brink says better YG is still desirable, but it actually shows up as a
negative (-0.24) correlation.
“Intuitively
that does not make sense, because on virtually any grid you get paid a premium
for more YG 1s and 2s,” he says. “The quality grade influence is so strong that
the cattle that graded well brought back such a positive premium that it
actually offset the fact they probably had a few less YG 1s and 2s.”
So what
do all of these relationships mean?
Simply
put, cutability and quality are both important keys to getting more dollars,
but within southern cattle the quality grades are especially rewarded. Northern
cattle are expected to hit those high marks and then some.
“If your
cattle are grading 70% Choice, just average in the North, should you be
satisfied with that?” Brinks asks. “No, you wouldn’t want to quit there,
because there is more opportunity for the cattle that can do better.”
However,
northern packing plants typically run 12% to 15% outs, with some weeks
eclipsing 20%.
“That is
a big number, to have one in six carcasses coming through as a non-conforming
carcass,” he says. “We have missed the mark as an industry when we do that.”
He
pointed out YG and heavies are both a genetic and feeding-management problem.
Northern
cattle are more Angus-influenced, and Brink attributes the better grading to
that, but he says it also brings a challenge “to keep working on those yield
grades.”
Fortunately,
the American Angus Association measures and tracks those traits, providing
dollar-value ($Value) indices such as $YG and $B as producer selection aids.
“Those are
tools that not every breed has, but the Angus breed does and they work well,”
he says.
Just as
breeders watch genetic connections to get all they want out of an animal,
perhaps feeders should consider these or their own set of premium and discounts
correlations to get the most out of value-based marketing.
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