Oklahoma Farm Report masthead graphic with wheat on the left and cattle on the right.
Howdy Neighbors!
Ron Hays, Director of Farm and Ranch Programming, Radio Oklahoma Ag Network  |  2401 Exchange Ave, Suite F, Oklahoma City, Ok 73108  |  (405) 601-9211

advertisements
   
   
   
   
   

Agricultural News


Cargill to Shutter Plainview Beef Plant- Hoping to Dry Up Excess Packing Capacity

Fri, 18 Jan 2013 07:44:11 CST

Cargill to Shutter Plainview Beef Plant- Hoping to Dry Up Excess Packing Capacity The following are comments offered by Len Steiner and Steve Meyer in the Daily Livestock Report that is a email summary of a top news story daily impacting the livestock industry. Today's report looks at the impact of Cargill Beef announcing they will close their Plainview, Texas beef plant as of February first of this year.




"Live cattle futures collapsed in Thursday's trading as Cargill announced that it would sharply reduce packing capacity in light of limited cattle supplies in the Texas Panhandle. According to the Cargill press release, their plant in Plainview Texas will be idled following the results of "an exhaustive analysis of the regional cattle supply and processing capacity situation in North America...Increased feed costs resulting from the prolonged drought, combined with herd liquidations by cattle ranchers, are severely and adversely contributing to the challenging business conditions we face as an industry."


"The closure will affect 2000 employees at the Plainview facility. According to the Cargill website, the facility had a processing capacity of 4650 cattle per day, making it one of the larger plants operated by the company. According to data from "Cattle Buyers Weekly," Cargill operated 8 plants in 2012, with a total daily capacity of a little over 30,000 cattle per day. Some of those cattle (about 14%) were non-fed cws and bulls, however, so the total steer and heifer packing capacity was a little over 26,000 head. According to the data available to us, and this is for most but not all US beef packing plants, the Cargill Plainview plant represented about 4% of the steer/heifer slaughter capacity.


"In the short term, the closing of the facility will reduce the demand for cattle and better align capacity with available supplies. Reduced demand for cattle means lower prices in the short term and that's what futures traded yesterday in both the live and feeder cattle pit. Packers have struggled with margins in recent months as extra capacity forced them to aggressively compete for cattle even as beef prices languished. With about 4% of the capacity removed in short order, this will provide packers with more leverage. The closing will be negative for feedlots, which are already struggling with high feed costs and record breakevens for animals they placed last fall. As a result, feedlot demand for cattle will fall as well. Indeed, at the end of the trading session on Thursday, feeder cattle were down more on the day than live cattle.


"Last year, we noted that higher beef prices do not simply happen, they are the end result of a wrenching process that will cause a lot of pain as the industry downsizes in order to bring a margin back in the business. But the recent drop in live cattle prices does not change, in our view, the medium and longer term outlook for cattle and beef prices. The closing will likely squeeze feeder margins and it is likely that we may see increased consolidation in that sector as well, a process that has already been underway. The closing of the plant will reduce the daily number of cattle coming to market, reducing the overall beef supply, which is what most analysts already expected for 2013. So far end users are not willing to pay more for beef because they do not have to. As we noted in our report yesterday, US beef prices last year languished because per capita supply availability in the US was down just 0.4% from the previous year, too small of a reduction to have a significant impact on beef prices. For 2013, per capita supplies are expected to drop 3.5%."


You can learn more about the report by going to their website- click here for that.



    

 

WebReadyTM Powered by WireReady® NSI

 


Top Agricultural News

  • Oklahoma Youth Expo Sale of Champions Sale Order Available Here- Sale Set for 4 PM Friday  Fri, 17 Mar 2023 04:50:54 CDT
  • Rural Voters Dominated Vote to Defeat Recreational Marijuana March 7th  Fri, 10 Mar 2023 07:13:05 CST
  • Ron Hays Talks to Israeli Ag Tour Guide Colin Lotzof About the Miraclel of Ag in Israel  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 22:11:04 CST
  • OALP Members Experience First Hand View of Cutting Edge Drip Irrigation Technology as Israel Travel Ends  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 10:51:49 CST
  • OALP Members Get First Hand View of Cutting Edge Drip Irrigation Technology as Israel Travel Ends  Wed, 22 Feb 2023 10:50:10 CST
  • Oklahoma Ag Leadership Program Sees Fruit, Beef and Dairy Production North of the Sea of Galilee in Israel  Mon, 20 Feb 2023 21:56:02 CST
  • Oklahoma Ag Leadership Program Sees Diverse Farm Operations in Jordan River Valley of Israel  Sun, 19 Feb 2023 21:17:30 CST
  • Israeli Tour Guide Mark Kedem Talks About The Cultural Aspects of What Class XX of OALP is Experiencing   Sat, 18 Feb 2023 22:17:23 CST

  • More Headlines...

       

    Ron salutes our daily email sponsors!

    Oklahoma Beef council Oklahoma Ag Credit Oklahoma Farm Bureau National Livestock Credit Ag Mediation Program P&K Equipment Oklahoma City Farm Show Union Mutual Stillwater Milling Oklahoma Cattlemen's Association KIS FUTURES, INC.
       
          
       
       

    Search OklahomaFarmReport.com

    © 2008-2024 Oklahoma Farm Report
    Email Ron   |   Newsletter Signup   |    Current Spots   |    Program Links

    WebReady powered by WireReady® Inc.