• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Feeder Cattle Locked 'Limit Up'

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Feeder Cattle Locked 'Limit Up'

    Great news for feeders this morning as
    U.S. quarterly corn stocks (as of March
    01) were forecast 5.4 billion bushels as
    compared to the average trade guess of 5
    billion bu. This triggered a massive
    'limit down' selloff in corn. December
    corn broke below $5.50/bu today.

    Cdn feed costs are going to break (IMO)
    as today's U.S. price action was
    technically deadly to their markets.

    Also, packers will have to belly up to
    the cattle buying table by mid-April
    which should provide some horsepower to
    Cdn fat bids.

    What comes around, goes around when it
    comes to markets.

    #2
    Good news on one hand, bad on the other for me. I got all my feeders to sell yet, worrying that I would have to keep feeding through seeding time before some price increase. At the same time, the grain side is definately the part that has kept me solvent recently.

    Comment


      #3
      Bought bred black Heifers today. Averaged 1475
      lots of middle age cows 1200$ Now I just have to
      drive the liner myself to go get em! Somethin
      about some holiday.

      Comment


        #4
        Probably a good decision if the heifers are good quality. You have a rising land base, a rising forage base, and with moisture levels looking good you should be able to handle the extra cattle.

        Comment


          #5
          Probably a good decision if the heifers are good quality. You have a rising land base, a rising forage base, and with moisture levels looking good you should be able to handle the extra cattle.

          Comment


            #6
            Can someone explain paying so much more for bred heifers versus a proven cow? What is your re-breeding success on these heifers, likely a higher open rate than cows? I have never stepped into buying bred heifers, but a solid cow for less money seems a better deal, and lower risk to me. Yet, lots of guys chase the heifers.

            Comment


              #7
              Ya you bet ASRG!

              Very nice looking heifers one calved before being
              sold. Guess some guys hired man walked off was
              the story anyway. Not sure how they could be any
              nicer heifers. Great temperament, length,
              condition, all around geat stuff. Not UFA cows for
              sure ....bad (udder, feet, attitude) that usually this
              time of year brings. By the time I drove home 6.5
              hours grabbed a truck and wrestled a trailer out of
              the snow and headed back ...the mart had 2
              calves waiting for us. Loaded at 5 am and headed
              back another 7 hours. Glad my 18 yr old son
              wanted experience driving truck took turns driving
              hammer down! Good thing DOT's don't work
              holidays...son not legal yet for class one training,
              no log book, no manifest, a few lights on the truck
              didn't work, straight pipe exhaust, trailer brakes
              sketchy, and o ya purple fuel. ))

              Comment


                #8
                I'm with you cattleman - If I wanted young I'd buy
                heifer calves/yearling heifers or buy cows bred back
                with their second calf. I think its tough moving bred
                heifers/just calved heifers to different
                country/management.

                I think feeder cattle have been a better buy than
                breds of late - you can ship them in August which
                buys you drought protection.

                Comment


                  #9
                  In my view people pay more for heifers because
                  your sure of the age of cow your getting. Lots of
                  cows that have some age yet look pretty good are
                  way older than one may think. I just haven't had
                  great results here building my own bulls or young
                  heifers into cows. At preg check last fall the vast
                  majority of opens were cows I bought as open
                  young heifers. If I can sell these bred heifers calfs
                  for 750$ the cow has half paid for itself. Feeding
                  for 57 or so more days then onto cheap grass.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Does this mean you've given up on the goat herding thing? LOL

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Continued meltdown in corn prices on
                      Easter Monday. May corn taking aim at
                      $6.50/bu. This sell-off will shake our
                      barley bids lower.

                      Both cash wheat and corn values can
                      slide further as this appears to be a
                      general deflationary sell-off in the
                      commodity world (IMO).

                      Feeder cattle continue to race higher on
                      corn's price demise.

                      Comment

                      • Reply to this Thread
                      • Return to Topic List
                      Working...