Fund buying boosts U.S. live cattle futures

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: June 26, 2013

,

Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle climbed on Wednesday with help from fund buying, traders and analysts said.

CME live cattle August led advances. Spread traders bought August and sold spot-June before it expires on Friday.

Spot-June settled up 0.125 cent per pound to 121.275 cents. Most-actively traded August closed 1.05 cents higher at 122.175 cents (all figures US$).

Speculative buyers bought futures believing the market has turned around after recently breaking out of the high end of its trading range.

“August is gaining on the 100-day moving average at 122.55 cents, which should confirm we’ve carved out a market bottom,” a trader said.

Read Also

Photo: Getty Images Plus

Alberta crop conditions improve: report

Varied precipitation and warm temperatures were generally beneficial for crop development across Alberta during the week ended July 8, according to the latest provincial crop report released July 11.

Despite tepid wholesale beef demand, investors expect cash cattle to trade steady with $120 per hundredweight (cwt) last week following futures’ upswing on Wednesday.

There were no cash cattle bids or asking prices reported, said feedlot sources.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wednesday morning data showed the wholesale price of choice beef at $196.33/cwt, which was $1.24 lower than on Tuesday. Select cuts were up 24 cents to $186.16.

CME feeder cattle drew support from higher live cattle futures.

And traders cited prices $1-$4/cwt higher for cash feeder cattle in the most-watched Oklahoma City market.

August settled up 1.05 cents/lb. to 148.925 cents, and September was at 151.025 cents, or 0.95 cent higher.

Hogs slip with cash optimism

Hog futures slipped on profit taking in anticipation of lower trending cash hog prices, traders and analysts said.

Packers will need fewer hogs with plants closed at least one day for the U.S. Independence Day holiday. And some processors have all the hogs they need as supplies build seasonally.

USDA data showed the average hog price on Wednesday morning in the most-watched Iowa/Minnesota market at $98.94/cwt, $2.01 lower than on Tuesday.

From Monday to Wednesday, packers processed 1.207 million hogs, 20,000 more than last week and up 15,000 from a year earlier, according to USDA.

Wholesale pork demand is expected to stall after retailers top off inventories for July 4 grilling demand, but not before the cutout nears its all-time high.

Wednesday morning’s government mandatory wholesale pork price report, or cutout, calculated on a plant-delivered basis, was at $109.74/cwt, up $1.64 from Tuesday.

The wholesale pork price on Wednesday was the highest of the year. And using USDA’s voluntary pork prices, which were replaced by the mandatory report, Wednesday’s price is near the $110.19 record set on Aug. 8, 2011.

CME July hogs settled down 0.2 cent/lb. to 99.95 cents and August closed at 97.65 cents, or down 0.05 cent.

— Theopolis Waters reports for Reuters from Chicago.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications