Robust US Beef Expansion Will Slow

US - Nothing like record cattle prices and profitability to get an industry excited about expansion. The latest USDA Cattle report shows a rapid expansion is underway with cattle and calf numbers up three per cent and beef cow numbers up four per cent in the past year, writes Chris Hurt from the Department of Agricultural Economics at Purdue University.
calendar icon 8 February 2016
clock icon 5 minute read

Record high cattle prices in the last-half of 2014 and first-half of 2015 raised excitement among beef cow producers and they heard the market's expansion call. During that 12-month period Nebraska finished steer prices averaged $162 per hundredweight. Since May 2015, cattle prices have fallen sharply and averaged just $126 in the final quarter of 2015.

Further evidence of the rapid expansion is shown in the three per cent increase in the number of beef heifers being retained to be added to the cow herd. In addition, the number that is expected to calve in 2016 is up six per cent.

The beef expansion is widespread across the country as all regions increased their beef cow numbers.

However, leading the expansion has been the Central and Southern Plains states with 60 per cent of the nation's total expansion over the past two years. Drought in those regions through 2013 had been an additional reason for massive reductions of beef cow numbers. Some of the current expansion in those regions, then, represents restocking as the grass returned.

The Southern Plains is the nation's largest beef cow region and they have expanded by nine per cent over the past two years.

Other important beef cow regions and their magnitude of beef cow expansion over the past two years include: the Central Plains up five per cent; the Western Corn Belt up five per cent; the Eastern Corn Belt up five per cent; the Southeast up one per cent; and the Northern Plains up one per cent.

Feeder cattle supplies will be rising as well. The number of steers and heifers weighing over 500 pounds that are not being retained for breeding purposes is up four per cent. This is a sizable increase in the feeder cattle supply that can go into feedlots and therefore add to slaughter supplies in the last-half of 2016 and 2017.

The industry is two years into beef cow expansion so an interesting question is, "How long will this expansion phase last?"

Historically, beef cattle expansions lasted five to six years. However, history is not likely to be a very good guide on this cycle. The reasons are that the current expansion has already been quick and of large magnitude.

Secondly, the profit outlook for brood cow operations is already providing much less incentive than a year ago. Third, beef production in the rest of the world is also expanding and other countries are able to ship increasing supplies of beef to the US and to our foreign buyers.

Finally, US pork and poultry supplies are also expanding rapidly providing heightened competition.

My best guess is that US cow numbers will continue to rise for only one or two more years, making this a relatively short expansion phase of three or four years.

Available beef supplies in 2015 were higher than had been anticipated at the start of the year. USDA inventory data one year ago indicated that the number of cattle available for slaughter would be down about five per cent.

In reality, the amount of beef available in the US in 2015 was actually up one per cent. How did we go from five per cent lower slaughter numbers to one per cent more beef? The answer is in higher weights and in higher beef imports. Each added about three percentage points and thus the amount of beef available was up one per cent.

For 2016, beef production is expected to rise by four per cent. However, USDA analysts believe that trade, particularly beef imports, will be down this year.

That is possible since beef prices will be lower and will provide less incentive for large imports. A counter argument is that the exchange rate of the US dollar is currently stronger than for most of 2015. The dollar is particularly strong versus Brazil who is the second largest world beef exporter. These relationships at least suggest some uncertainty for US beef trade in 2016.

The live cattle futures market is not optimistic for finished cattle prices. An estimate of 2016 finished cattle prices derived from current futures suggest yearly averages of around $125. This compares with actual prices of $126 for calendar 2013, $155 in 2014, and $148 in 2015.

The annual 2016 pattern of prices from these estimates for the four quarters of 2016 are $132, $128, $117, and $120 in the final quarter. Live cattle futures have had extreme volatility in the past two years, so their accuracy at predicting forward prices should be suspect. However, live cattle futures are the hedging mechanism for cattle feeders and must therefore be taken as the current opportunity to forward contract finished cattle prices.

Steer calves weighing 500 to 550 pounds at Oklahoma City reached record high prices in May 2015 at $290 per hundredweight. By December, those prices had fallen to $194, a level that provides only modest profits above total costs of production, and therefore small incentives for continued brood cow expansion.

The current futures market estimate of 2016 finished cattle prices might provide prices for those Oklahoma City calves of $185 to $205. This would probably signal small potential profits above all costs.

Under this price situation the industry would continue further beef cow expansion plans this year, with the expansion phase more likely to begin leveling off in 2017.

Citation: Hurt, C. "Weekly Outlook: Robust Beef Expansion Will Slow" farmdoc daily (6):20, Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, February 1, 2016.

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