Live cattle ease on profit-taking - CME

Hog futures close higher
calendar icon 15 February 2023
clock icon 2 minute read

US live cattle futures closed lower on Tuesday on profit-taking after rising to the highest levels in nearly eight years, with worries about the health of the US economy adding to bearish sentiment, Reuters reported, citing analysts.

Benchmark April live cattle futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) settled down 0.425 cent at 164.675 cents per pound. Front-month February finished down 0.125 cent at 162.150 cents per pound, retreating after climbing to 162.350 cents, the highest on a continuous chart of the spot futures contract since April 2015.

CME March feeder cattle futures ended down 0.550 cent at 186.650 cents per pound.

"It's just a little profit-taking. We broke out of the top of a trading channel, and then didn't have any follow-through," said Doug Houghton, analyst with Brock Capital Management.

Macroeconomic jitters hung over the markets. Wall Street equities ended mixed after data showed US consumer prices accelerated in January, suggesting that the Fed will maintain its fight against inflation.

But wholesale beef prices firmed, with choice cuts up $2.11 for the day at $272.06 per hundredweight (cwt). Select cuts were up $2.57 at $258.78, the US Department of Agriculture said.

CME hog futures closed higher as cash hog prices firmed, a sign of tightening supplies. CME April hogs settled up 0.900 cent at 87.250 cents per pound, and June hogs rose 0.575 cents to end at 104.825 cents.

The CME Lean Hog Index, a two-day weighted average of cash hog prices, rose by 63 cents to $74.64.

"A seasonal decrease in hog supplies seems to have begun, and that is accompanied normally by an increase in prices," Houghton said.

The USDA priced pork carcasses at $81.88 per cwt Tuesday afternoon, up 14 cents from Monday.

© 2000 - 2024 - Global Ag Media. All Rights Reserved | No part of this site may be reproduced without permission.