Pork industry faces record losses
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[August 30, 2012]
URBANA -- A tsunami of red ink is about to wash
across the pork industry, which is facing losses unseen even in the
fall of 1998, when hog prices at times approached zero value.
According to a Purdue University Extension economist, these are some
of the current stressors: more hogs than expected, rapid sow
liquidation now under way and record feed prices. Losses in the
final quarter of this year could be $60 per head, exceeding the
previous record quarterly losses of $45 per head in the fall of
1998.
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"Slaughter numbers in the past two weeks have been up 6 percent,
when only about 1 percent more hogs were expected," said Chris
Hurt. "This has caused a $10-per-hundredweight drop in live
prices since late July, with prices now in the low $60s.
"The source of those extra hogs is probably related to some
delayed marketings due to the summer heat, to a desire to sell
pigs more quickly before prices really tumble moving into fall,
and to high sow slaughter. Projected prices for the final
quarter this year are in the mid-$50s, using current lean hog
futures as a base. Tragically, costs of production are expected
to be above $75 per live hundredweight for the remainder of the
summer, this fall and winter," Hurt said.
Hurt predicted losses per head this summer at an estimated
$30, followed this fall by record quarterly losses of $60 per
head. Losses in the first and second quarters of 2013 are
projected to be $38 and $5 per head, respectively. Over this
one-year span, losses may average about $33 per head, meaning
total losses of around $4 billion for the U.S. industry.
"There is strong evidence that the initial wave of
breeding-herd reduction began in early August and has
intensified," Hurt said. "Sow-slaughter data show that around
30,000 sows were liquidated in the month of August alone. This
would represent a reduction of about 0.6 percent of the national
sow herd in one month. This rate will continue, and perhaps even
increase, if corn prices stay at current levels or move higher.
The breeding herd may decline by 4 to 6 percent in the six
months from August 2012 through January 2013. The rate of
liquidation is expected to slow sharply after this coming
winter," Hurt said.
Hurt described the dilemma for the industry to be the
enormous losses for pigs that are already born. Continued
liquidation of sows will not reduce slaughter numbers until next
summer and so does not address the short-term financial
disaster.
"Short of euthanizing young pigs, reduction of weights can
reduce total pork supplies, use less feed and enhance hog
prices," Hurt said. "The economics of reducing weights is
largely related to packer-buying programs. Generally, it is not
economical for producers to sell at lighter weights that receive
a discount. Perhaps packers would consider lowering those
threshold weights in this emergency. Producers should recognize
that this could be costly to packers and to not expect one
packer to do so unless all agreed," he said.
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Hurt said that President Obama authorized the purchase of a modest
amount of pork.
"That volume is so small as to reduce the losses by less than $1
per head," Hurt said. "Other demand stimulation could help increase
pork prices, but the program would need to be much larger and more
money would likely have to come from a Congress that has not had a
strong record of agreement or accomplishment in recent months."
There remains a small amount of hope that a partial waiver of the
ethanol RFS for 2013 could reduce corn use for ethanol and lower
corn prices. However, evaluations at the University of Illinois,
Purdue and Iowa State all indicate that such a partial waver may
have only small effects on the volume of corn used for ethanol.
"Financial losses of the magnitudes projected here will cause
massive erosions of family equity and some bankruptcies," Hurt said.
"Unfortunately, losses in 2008 and 2009 were not fully recovered by
the profits in 2010 and 2011, so that some producers face this
tsunami in weakened financial condition.
"Family hog farms with a sizable land base will have land equity
to draw on," Hurt said. "Larger hog producers with a minimum land
base will need to draw on corporate equity and then their lenders.
Lenders will make the final decisions for the weakest but will
strive to keep companies in operation as they seek new buyers. This
means that another round of consolidation of ownership can be
anticipated," he said.
Hurt concluded by saying that unfortunately, individual producers
are going to need to find their own way through the short-term
carnage.
"The irony is that hog production may return to profitability by
midsummer 2013 when meal prices begin to moderate, hog prices move
to record highs, and rain and reasonable temperatures bless our
nation's corn and soybean fields once again," he said.
[Text from file received
from the University
of Illinois College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental
Sciences] |