Jan. 28, 2011
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
For more
information contact:
Steve Suther,
Certified Angus Beef LLC Industry Information director, at ssuther@certifiedangusbeef.com or (785) 889-4162; or
Paul Dykstra, CAB
beef cattle specialist, at pdykstra@certifiedangusbeef.com or (330) 465-3662
Photo available
at: http://www.cabpartners.com/news/photos/dykstra_paul.jpg
Quality,
Price Higher for Beef in 2010
The 2010 beef
business trends include exceptional prices, increased quality and better
rewards.
ÒSlaughter cows
and bulls were a hot commodity and producers cashed in on those record prices
from the spring through the fall,Ó said Paul Dykstra, beef cattle specialist
with the Certified Angus Beef
¨ (CAB¨) brand. He tracks USDA grading trends and harvest
numbers in his weekly column, ÒRearview Mirror on Quality.Ó
Reviewing last yearÕs
data, Dykstra noted fed steers averaged almost $12/hundredweight (cwt.) more in
2010 than in 2009, according to the USDA 5-Area Report ($94.89 vs. $83.16).
However, that just marked a return to 2008 levels.
ÒThey were a
highlight only with regard to timing and the state of the nationÕs economy,Ó
Dykstra said. ÒThe elusive $100 target was captured or surpassed one week in
October and four out of the last five weeks of the year. Still, the beef market
was resilient, to say the least, during a very tough time.Ó
Strong exports
and improved hide and offal values have been credited for some of the
bounce-back.
ÒCorn and other
grains faired just as well, so we canÕt discount what drove breakevens to new
heights,Ó Dykstra added.
Higher cattle
prices did not subdue the packersÕ rate of harvest. Federally inspected harvest
numbers were up 2.81% year over year. ThatÕs 17,812 head per week, roughly
equivalent to the output of one additional medium- to large-size packing plant
— but that is not what happened.
ÒThere were no
major facilities added to production,Ó Dykstra said. ÒPackers simply kept their
chains working more hours and kept the schedules full. But carcass weights were
down.Ó
Steer carcasses
averaged 835 pounds (lb.), down 12 lb. from 2009, while heifers were 14 lb.
lighter at 768 lb. each.
ÒEarly
predications say carcasses will get bigger in 2011 to compensate for fewer
available calves and fed cattle,Ó he noted. ÒAs the worldÕs foremost producer
of corn-fed beef, the quality of the U.S. product is top-of-mind to everyone
with a stake in the game.Ó
From 2000 to
2007, the number of carcasses grading USDA Choice increased only 0.05
percentage points, but 2008 and 2009 brought two years of heavy increases. The
Choice share of the annual harvest moved up by 3.37 and then 3.51 percentage
points, respectively.
ÒStakeholders
questioned if this rapid advance would hold or if short-term factors had
created the two-year anomaly in grading,Ó the CAB cattle specialist said.
ÒExtreme winter weather covered the feeding belt in 2009 and the onset of heavy
inclusion of distillerÕs by-products in feedlot rations coincided with the
timeline, as did full adoption of camera-assisted grading by USDA.Ó
Dykstra said,
Ò2010 may have settled some of the doubts.Ó
The Choice grade
moved higher again, though not as dramatically, by 1.53 percentage points to
end the year at 61.4% for all USDA-graded plants. The Prime grade increased a
modest 0.17 percentage point, to bring the annual average to 3.15% of last
yearÕs annual fed cattle harvest.
ÒThat small
fraction is of little consequence to the commodity masses, but it carves out an
advantage for breeders and feeders who care to focus on it,Ó he said. ÒScarcity
means higher values.Ó
USDA grid pricing
numbers indicate that an 850-lb. Prime carcass wouldÕve brought $132.86 above
regional fed-cattle averages in 2010, $167.62 higher than a Select carcass of
the same weight.
The portion of
black cattle, eligible for branded beef programs based on the ÒAngus typeÓ
requirement, was higher again in 2010.
ÒData tracking
came to a halt in late October, due to USDA system overhauls, but the
nine-month trend showed the black-hided share of fed cattle at 63.68%,Ó Dykstra
said.
ThatÕs up 2.34
points from 2009, when USDA first began reporting it. With the combination of
more black-hided cattle in the harvest mix and a higher grading trend, USDA
shows 25.4% of the Choice-grading carcasses were certified into an
upper-two-thirds-Choice branded program like CAB in 2010. ThatÕs an annual
increase of 2.24 points.
Price per pound
still commands attention when cattlemen decide production goals and management
plans.
ÒChoice and
premium Choice beef supplies are at record levels, so weÕd expect price per
pound to decrease for these two classes on a year-to-year basis, but the
opposite is true,Ó Dykstra said.
Weekly USDA grid
price data says packers paid an average of $6.30/cwt. for Choice above Select
in 2010, up $1.20/cwt. of carcass compared to 2009. The CAB premium —
added to the Choice bonus for qualifying carcasses — also increased.
Although individual grids paid significantly more, the weighted U.S. average
moved up from $2.71 to $2.78/cwt. At the same time, Yield Grade (YG) 1
carcasses (those with the least external fat) improved 4 cents while YG 4 carcasses
were devalued by 3 cents to a discount of -$3.83/cwt.
ÒThe premium for
marbling is much lower than it was in 2006, when we had 10% fewer Choice
carcasses and the U.S. economy was roaring,Ó Dykstra allowed. ÒBut, given the
uncertainty in our domestic market and the increased availability of Choice and
higher beef, the uptick in premiums flew in the face of expectations. The nod
goes to quality, where American cattlemen are leading the world.Ó
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