Shrinking U.S. cattle herd signals more pain from high beef prices
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[August 09, 2022] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. consumers
grappling with soaring inflation face more pain from high beef prices as
ranchers are reducing their cattle herds due to drought and lofty feed
costs, a decision that will tighten livestock supplies for years,
economists said.
The decline in cattle numbers, combined with stiff costs for other
production expenses, illustrate why a recent fall in grain prices to
levels not seen since Russia's invasion of major corn and wheat exporter
Ukraine may not immediately translate into lower food prices at the
grocery store.
Feed is the largest cost component of raising a cow for beef, so lower
grain prices often help to reduce meat prices. But meat companies like
Tyson Foods Inc, which reported weaker-than-expected earnings on Monday,
must pay top dollar for animals when there are fewer to slaughter.
Processors are also paying more for labor, fuel and other items.
"There's really a lot of distance between the price of those grains and
the price of those products at the meat counter," said Bernt Nelson,
economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation.
Corn futures prices have dropped 26% since hitting a 10-year high in
April after the Ukraine war sparked worries about global supplies.
Prices are still up 9% from a year ago at about $6 per bushel.
The lower prices benefit livestock producers, though U.S. government
data shows ranchers on July 1 had already reduced the nation's cattle
herd by about 2% from a year earlier to its lowest level for that date
in about seven years.
Producers will likely liquidate even more cattle due to drought, said
Shane Miller, Tyson Foods' president of fresh meats, on a conference
call following the quarterly results. Chief Executive Donnie King
projected prices for cattle and beef will rise moving into 2023 and
2024.
Ground beef prices have already jumped 10% from last year, U.S.
government data shows. Rising cattle costs eat in to meatpackers' profit
from high beef prices.
Tyson reported its beef unit's adjusted operating margins dropped to
10.2% in the April to June quarter from 12.7% the previous quarter and
22.6% a year earlier, while live cattle costs increased about $480
million. Margins will decline further to 5% to 7%, the company said.
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Cuts of meat are seen for sale at a butcher shop in Manhattan, New
York City, U.S., August 8, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
Margins and meat supplies get a temporary boost as ranchers send more animals to
slaughter, instead of keeping them to reproduce, analysts said. But consumers
will ultimately be left with less beef, and it takes nearly two years to raise a
cow once the liquidation stops, economists said.
"The prices are here to stay for a while," said Glenn Brunkow, a farmer who
raises cattle and sheep in Wamego, Kansas.
Brunkow, a member of the Kansas Farm Bureau's board of directors, said high
diesel fuel and feed prices continue to drive up his production costs. He
recently paid about $475 per ton for sheep feed made with corn and other
ingredients, up 40% from a year ago.
Some consumers are switching to chicken or cheaper types of beef to reduce their
food costs, meatpacking executives said. Still, Tyson said beef demand remains
strong and reported sales volumes rose 1.3% in the last quarter as prices
slipped.
"Even though we may be seeing some relief in feed prices, that demand is going
to hold (beef) prices where they're at," Iowa State University economist Lee
Schulz said.
Other protein options have also become pricier. Tyson said its chicken prices
soared 20.1% in the last quarter from a year earlier. Wholesale prices for white
eggs, meanwhile, reached a record high of $3.40 a dozen on July 21 due to strong
retail demand and avian flu outbreaks that killed egg-laying chickens, data firm
Urner Barry said.
In Eugene, Oregon, accounting student and mother Blair Hickok, 40, said her
monthly grocery bill spiked 40% to more than $1,200 due to climbing prices for
beef, chicken, eggs and products like Johnsonville bratwursts. Her family
stopped eating out to save money.
"We cannot sustain this for very long," said Hickok.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Matthew
Lewis)
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