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re: Meat prices spiking. Here is supposedly why.

Posted on 5/27/20 at 11:52 am to
Posted by AgGator
Member since Nov 2009
132 posts
Posted on 5/27/20 at 11:52 am to
In general I'm not a fan of that. Almost all of the beef we import is lean grinding beef of which we don'y make enough of. The American appetite for beef is in the form of steaks and ground beef. We produce plenty of the high value cuts but not enough of lean meat. We could grind up more chucks and rump but those cuts (largely as roasts) have a demand in other countries where it makes more sense to export them rather than grind them for domestic sale as ground product. That's where countries like Australia and New Zealand come in (along with Mexico and Canada). They mostly produce lower quality, leaner animals that we use to make ground beef with. We also import live animals from Mexico and Canada that are then finished and killed here. You might argue that those live animals hurt the demand for our own domestic animals but imports and exports with those two countries are very important for our own industry where the impact offsets the gain.

I think we are going to be in for a pickle until we get more current on fat cattle. Right now we are horribly uncurrent and therefore placements into feedyards are down which then feeds back into the feeder and calf markets. I don't know that our current import and export structure has that big of an impact on that in the overall scheme of things.

What we need in our industry is better price discovery and competition in fat cattle. What people disagree on is how to get there. More packers would be great but it isn't as simple as some might make it out to be.
Posted by dukke v
PLUTO
Member since Jul 2006
204294 posts
Posted on 5/27/20 at 11:53 am to
And you know all this how??????
Posted by angus1838
Southeast Alabama
Member since Jan 2012
923 posts
Posted on 5/27/20 at 1:13 pm to
I know our exports (weight wise) are just about even to our imports and the quality of our exports outshines what we import. I think by halting everything except Canada and Mexico it would go a long way towards restoring balance from the excessive supplies of fed cattle on hand. As producers time is on our side we can wait it out. I do feel bad bad for the stockers with cattle on feed. One good thing I guess is that carcass weights are going up. The heavier over finished cattle are also holding the quality grade higher than normal for this time of year.
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