Cattle Current Market Update with Wes Ishmael

Cattle Current Market Update with Wes Ishmael


Cattle Current Podcast—Jan. 20, 2025

January 18, 2025

Negotiated cash fed cattle trade ranged from mostly inactive on light demand in the Southern Plains to light to moderate on light to moderate demand in the North through Friday afternoon with too few transactions to trend, according to the Agricultural Marketing Service.


For the week, FOB live prices were $1 higher in the Texas Panhandle at $201/cwt., steady to $1 higher in Kansas at $201, unevenly steady in Nebraska at $203-$205 and $1-$3 higher in the western Corn Belt at $203-$206. Dressed delivered prices were $2 higher in Nebraska at $322 and steady to $2 higher in the western Corn Belt at $320-$322.


Choice boxed beef cutout value was 28¢ higher Friday afternoon at $333.69/cwt. Select was 45¢ higher at $319.83. Week to week, Choice was 85¢ higher and Select was $5.69 higher.


Estimated total cattle slaughter last week was 603,000 head, which was 14,000 head more than the previous week but 2,000 head fewer than the same week last year. Year-to-date total cattle slaughter of 1.5 million head was 219,000 head fewer (-12.9%) than the same period a year earlier. Estimated year-to-date beef production of 1.3 billion pounds was 138.2 million pounds less (-9.7%).


Cattle futures closed narrowly mixed Friday, perhaps with some positioning on the long weekend.


Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of 38¢ lower, except for an average of 19¢ higher in the front two contracts. Live Cattle futures closed from an average of 29¢ lower in six contracts to an average of 15¢ higher.


Week to week on Friday, Feeder Cattle futures closed an average of $2.34 lower, except for $1.15 higher in spot Jan. Live Cattle futures were an average of $1.56 lower


Corn and Soybean futures were mixed Friday.


Corn futures closed 8¢ to 10¢ higher through old-crop contracts on tighter stocks relative to demand, then mostly 2¢ to 3¢ higher. Week to week, they were an average of 12’4¢ higher through old-crop contracts; up an average of 33¢ over the past two weeks.


Kansas City Wheat futures closed mostly unchanged to fractionally lower on Friday. Soybean futures closed 10¢ to 15¢ higher through near Aug, and then 1¢ to 7¢ higher.