CoBank has released a new report produced by their Knowledge Exchange division stating that live cattle prices should see a strong year-end rebound following the steepest 30-day decline since the 2003 discovery of mad cow disease in the U.S.
The report, titled “What’s Behind the Cattle Market Price Collapse?,” cites three factors for the sudden price decline in August and September: feedyards with an overabundance of unusually heavy fed cattle; exceptionally wide price disparities between beef prices and those of chicken and pork, which increased consumer purchases of chicken and pork at the expense of beef; and the market’s psychological overreaction to the abrupt price drop, which accelerated the decline.
“The price drop was very sudden – dropping $26 per hundredweight in 30 days – and clearly caught the market off-guard,” said Trevor Amen, animal protein economist with CoBank. “But we believe the causes of the drop were temporary, which sets the stage for a price rally. In fact, most cattle future contracts have posted near limit up moves over the past several days, perhaps indicating that the rally has already begun.”
The near-term outlook for beef demand calls for continued growth during the next four to six months, both domestically and overseas. According to Amen, the expected rally in cattle prices will be triggered by the normalization of price disparities between beef and chicken and pork, which will bolster consumers’ purchases of beef. As demand grows, wholesale/box-beef prices are expected to head higher, leading the way for a near-term rally across the entire beef complex.
However, the longer-term outlook for 2016 and 2017 still calls for cattle prices to trend downward, pressured by an anticipated increase in supply. Herd rebuilding efforts are expected to boost beef production starting in late 2016 and accelerating in 2017 and beyond. After rallying during the closing months of this year, cattle prices are expected to trend downward from late 2016 and through 2017, off their cyclical peak in late 2014.