In the month of November, the CME block cheese market plummeted from $2.78 to $1.68 per pound, while the barrel market dropped from $2.53 to $1.42. Cheese prices during 2020 plummeted to $1.00 per pound (4/15) in response to reduced Covid foodservice usage, then soared to $3.00 (7/13) on sharp demand for the USDA Farmers to Families Food Box program.
Read MoreIn Friday’s Cattle on Feed report, the USDA said that new placements onto feedlots in October were down 11.0% from a year ago, following 4 straight months of strong placement increases. But despite the drop in placements, feedlot inventories – at 11.97M head - were 1.3% above a year ago, 2.2% above a month ago, and the highest Nov. 1st on record. The report should be neutral to mildly bullish for cattle prices.
Read MoreChina has huge feed needs to rebuild its ASF-decimated hog herd, and has been a big buyer of U.S. corn and soybeans. In last week’s WASDE, the USDA increased its 2020/21 corn export forecast from 2.33B to 2.65B, 49% above 2019/20 levels. The USDA also lowered corn yield from 178.4 to 175.8 bushels per acre. The export & yield changes helped sink projected 2020/21 ending stocks from 2.17B to 1.70B bushels.
Read MoreThe ink isn’t dry yet, but it’s certainly not too early to speculate on how a Biden presidency could affect commodity markets for 2021. For starters, a potential thawing of trade relations with China could support corn, wheat, and soybean prices. China is rebuilding its ASF-decimated hog herd and is already a big buyer of U.S. corn and soybeans. The Chinese are also big buyers of U.S. pork. These numbers are likely to increase in 2021.
Read MoreSo far this year, block cheese prices have been record-low at $1.00 per pound in April, record-high at $3.00 in July, back down to $1.58 in Aug and are now $2.7825 (10/30). But two big factors point to lower cheese prices. First, U.S. milk output is growing - up 2.3% (year-over-year) in Sept, following a 1.8% increase in Aug and 1.5% in July.
Read MoreIn Friday’s Cattle on Feed report, the USDA said feedlot inventories on Oct 1st were 11.7M head, up 3.8% from a year ago. New placements in Sept were up 5.9%. That follows 11.0% & 9.1% increases in July & Aug, respectively. The jump in summer placements was partially a catch-up and rebalancing following processing plant closures in April/May.
Read MoreWings are hot – and I don’t mean spicy. USDA weighted average whole wing prices, that were sub-$1.00 in April, have soared to $2.20 per pound. Wings are one of those snacks and/or meals that hold up great for delivery and can be easily reheated at home. Wings sales at both grocery (prepared) and for food service take-out are red hot.
Read MoreHot, dry weather has put a dent in both corn and wheat crops. In Friday’s WASDE, the USDA again downgraded its 2020/21 corn output numbers (by 178M bushels) to 14.72B, while reducing yield modestly to 178.4 bushels per acre. The USDA’s 2020/21 corn price forecast was increased from $3.50 to $3.60 per bushel. Corn futures, which were $3.07 in early Aug, have rallied over the past 2 months to close at $3.95 per bushel on Friday.
Read MoreIn the 9/25 Hogs and Pigs Report, the USDA said U.S. inventories on 9/1 were 79.1M head, up 0.7% a year ago but down 1% from June 1. Breeding inventory, at 6.3M head, was down 1.5% from last year. Market hog inventory, at 72.8M head, was up 0.8%. It’s been a difficult year and the numbers indicate that there has been some herd liquidation as well as producers exiting the industry. Covid upended the market in 2020.
Read MoreIn Friday’s Cattle on Feed report, the USDA said feedlot inventories on Sept 1st were 11.4M head, up 3.8% from a year ago. New placements onto feedlots in Aug were up 9.1%. That follows an 11.0% increase in July. The jump in summer placements was partially a catch-up and rebalancing following processing plant closures in April/May.
Read MoreSoybean futures, which had dropped to 12-year lows of $7.91 per bushel in 2019, soared to a 2-year high of $10.43 on Friday. It was trade wars with China that led to last year’s plunge, and it’s Chinese buying that’s driving this year’s rally. There is debate over whether China actually needs the product, or if this is just election year politics.
Read MoreIn Friday’s WASDE report, the USDA downgraded its corn output numbers due to drought in several growing areas and the “derecho” storm that hit Iowa with 100-mph winds. The USDA cut 2020/21 corn yield from 181.8 to 178.5 bushels per acre and dropped its forecast for corn production from 15.3B to 14.9B bushels. If realized, it would still be the 2nd largest corn crop on record.
Read MoreIt’s been a wild ride for hog prices this year. Covid started to impact processing plants in March. Shut-downs led to animal inventory back-ups. CME futures prices that averaged $62.90/cwt in Q1, plunged to lows of $37.33 by mid-April. Producers tried putting hogs on a diet to slow weight gains - to no avail. March through Aug hog futures averaged $53.59, down 30.9% from a year earlier.
Read MoreBroiler flock numbers are struggling to recover. Chicks placed for grow-out, which were -7.6% in April and -5.6% in May, are still running negative vs. a year ago – down 2.5% for the first 3 weeks of Aug. Lower bird numbers are being partially offset by heavier weights. The USDA projects broiler output to be up 1.7% in 2020, as a big Q1 will be dragged down by declines (year-over-year) in Q2, Q3 and Q4.
Read MoreIn Friday’s Cattle on Feed report, the USDA said feedlot inventories on Aug 1st were 11.3M head, up 1.6% from a year ago. New placements onto feedlots in July were larger than expected at 11.0% above 2019. The jump in placements shows that beef is flowing through the system again and that feedlots are catching up on the April-May backlog in feeder cattle that resulted from processing plant closures.
Read MoreIn last week’s WASDE, the USDA raised its forecast for 2020/21 corn output and said yield will hit a record-high 181.8 bushels per acre. On the demand side, 2019/20 corn exports will hit a 7-year low, down 15% from a year ago. A big crop and slack demand prompted the USDA to slash it’s 2020/21 corn price forecast from $3.35 to a 14-year low of $3.10 per bushel.
Read MoreWhile restaurant industry execs and business owners have mostly railed against the federal government’s extra $600/week in unemployment benefits, we have to consider what might happen to restaurant sales now that it’s gone. Last week the Labor Dept. said U.S. employers added 1.8M jobs in July, following a combined gain of 7.5M in May and June. The unemployment rate dropped from 14.7% in April to 10.2% in July. These are really great numbers.
Read MoreMeat supplies are back. The USDA estimated that combined red meat and poultry output was 9.05B pounds in June, 8% higher than a year ago. Pork output led the way, up 13% in June, as processors tried to catch up with the backlog of hogs from April and May. Broiler eggs-set and chicks-placed are still running 1% behind last year, but the hatching flock has recovered to 3% above a year ago.
Read MoreOn Friday, the USDA released two key cattle reports that were mostly bearish for cattle/beef prices. In its mid-year cattle inventory report, the USDA said there were 103.0M cattle and calves in the U.S. on July 1, up slightly from 102.9M a year earlier. Milk cow numbers were marginally higher, beef cows a bit lower.
Read MoreFrom Thursday’s “Supply Chain Chat”: The U.S. is entering what may be a prolonged recession. The unemployment rate jumped from 3.5% in February to 11.1% in June. The consensus forecast of economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal is for GDP growth to contract by 5.9% in 2020. That’s 7 times the downturn we experienced during the financial crisis in 2008 (-0.8%).
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