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Feeder Cattle Prices Slide as Market Reassesses Supply Dynamics
Feeder cattle prices weakened significantly during Monday’s trading session, marking another challenging day in the livestock futures complex. The decline in feeder cattle prices reflected broader weakness across both live and feeder futures contracts, with market participants digesting fresh data on cattle placements and processing volumes. The session highlighted ongoing volatility in the cattle sector as producers and traders recalibrate their positions based on emerging supply indicators.
Live Cattle and Feeder Futures Post Notable Declines
Front-month live cattle futures experienced losses ranging from $1.60 to $2.75 per hundredweight, with February contracts closing at $244.975—down $1.60 from the previous close. April live cattle fell $2.75 to $239.250, while June settled $2.075 lower at $235.450. Feeder cattle prices declined even more sharply, with March contracts dropping $3.725 to $364.300. April feeders closed at $361.350, down $3.70, and May contracts retreated $3.025 to $357.975. The severity of the decline in feeder cattle prices suggested underlying concerns about market fundamentals despite steady cash trade activity ranging from $246 to $249 in northern regions and reaching $249 in southern markets.
CME Index and Auction Data Paint a Mixed Picture
The CME Feeder Cattle Index declined $1.57 to close at $375.80 on February 20, reflecting softer sentiment in the feeder cattle segment. However, the weekly Oklahoma City feeder cattle auction presented a more nuanced view. The sale encompassed 6,200 head, with feeder cattle holding steady to $3 higher. Lighter-weight feeder cattle demonstrated relative strength, gaining $10-15 per hundredweight, while calf prices strengthened, with steers posting $5 gains and heifers advancing $25. This resilience at the auction suggested that weight and quality remained important factors even as broader feeder cattle prices faced headwinds.
Cattle Placement Data Reveals Supply Contraction
January’s Cattle on Feed data, released the Friday prior, revealed a meaningful contraction in feeder cattle placement. Feeders placed in January totaled 1.736 million head, representing a 4.72% decline compared to the same month a year earlier and falling short of market estimates. January marketings declined even more sharply, dropping 13% to 1.626 million head. February 1 on-feed inventory totaled 11.505 million head, down 1.8% from the prior year compared to the 1.6% decline that markets had anticipated. The softer supply numbers fueled concerns about tighter cattle availability, which paradoxically contributed to weakness in feeder cattle prices as traders repositioned ahead of potential spring demand patterns.
Boxed Beef Prices Gain Despite Cattle Weakness
Wholesale boxed beef prices exhibited strength on Monday afternoon, trading counter to weakness in the live complex. Choice boxes advanced $2.52 to $364.31, while Select improved $3.57 to $364.31. The Choice-Select spread widened to $4.91, indicating differentiated demand for quality beef products. The USDA estimated federally inspected cattle slaughter at 106,000 head, representing 19,000 head above the prior week and 9,370 head higher than the comparable week last year, suggesting robust processing activity that may be supporting wholesale beef values even as feeder cattle prices remain under pressure.
The mixed signals between wholesale beef strength and declining feeder cattle prices underscore the complexity of the livestock market, where supply concerns and processing demand create competing pressures on different market segments throughout the production chain.