U.S. live cattle, hog futures pull back as Dow retreats

U.S. live cattle and hog futures finished lower on Tuesday in response to the stock market’s steep drop that ignited active fund selling in a wide range of commodities, said analysts and traders.U.S. stocks plunged following weak earnings that fueled worries about a global economic slowdown."All softs, grains and metals were lower amid economic weakness



U.S. live cattle slip as funds sell

U.S. live cattle futures fell more than one per cent on Thursday as investors took profits and funds liquidated long positions after the market dropped below key technical support levels, said analysts and traders. R.J. O’Brien floor manager James Brooks described the future’s selloff on Thursday as technical-related, with short-term funds the prime sellers. Chicago






Most U.S. live cattle drop on report caution

U.S. live cattle futures settled mostly lower Friday on caution before the 2 p.m. ET release of the U.S. Department of Agriculture cattle-on-feed report. While Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) live cattle drew support from higher cash cattle prices, selling in other contracts was tied to steep losses on Wall Street. Most live cattle futures lost


U.S. live cattle rise on beef quotes, cash anticipation

U.S. live cattle settled in positive territory for a fourth consecutive session as the recent rise in wholesale beef prices stirred anticipation for higher cash cattle values. Positioning before the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s monthly cattle-on-feed report on Friday offered extra support to Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) live cattle. Analysts expect Friday’s government data to

U.S. feeder cattle futures hit new 14-week high

U.S. feeder cattle futures rose on Wednesday, hitting a three-and-a-half-month high fueled by a shortage of feeder cattle and advances in the live cattle market. Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) spot October feeder cattle closed 0.85 cent higher, or 0.58 per cent, at 146.95 cents per pound. Most-actively traded November ended at 149.275 cents, 1.55 cents