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DTN Midday Livestock Comments 04/24 11:47
Traders Hit the Pause Button as They Wait to See What the Cash Cattle Market
Will Do
Asking prices are now noted in the South at $214 to $215, and in the North
at $340 plus.
ShayLe Stewart
DTN Livestock Analyst
GENERAL COMMENTS:
The livestock complex has been met with some more technical opposition today
that it was faced with earlier in the week. More than anything, the cattle
contracts seem to be questioning whether cash cattle prices be higher this
week. If so, it's likely that traders will again turn the contracts higher, but
they're still waiting patiently for trade to develop. May corn is down 2 cents
per bushel and May soybean meal is down $1.10. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
is down 527.16 points.
Thursday's export report shared that beef net sales of 10,300 mt for 2025
were down 41% from the previous week and 11% from the prior 4-week average. The
three primary buyers were South Korea (3,200 mt), Japan (1,900 mt) and Hong
Kong (1,300 mt). Pork net sales of 5,800 mt for 2025, a marketing year low,
were down 72% from the previous week and 82% from the prior 4-weeek average.
The three largest buyers were Japan (6,300 mt), Mexico (3,800 mt) and South
Korea (1,800 mt).
LIVE CATTLE:
The live cattle complex is yet again trading mostly higher as traders
continue to believe in the market's long-term bullishness. Some of the nearby
contracts are trading slightly lower, but that seems to be a mere pause in the
market's rally until traders are given green-light fundamentally, which
hopefully will come in the form of stronger cash cattle sales. It's fully
anticipated that fed cash cattle prices will be higher again this week, but no
trade has developed just yet. Asking prices are noted in the South at $214 to
$215, and in the North at $340 plus. June live cattle are down $0.10 at
$208.00, August live cattle are up $0.05 at $203.92 and October live cattle are
up $0.05 at $201.75.
Boxed beef prices are higher: choice up $1.38 ($333.35) and select up $1.40
($315.92) with a movement of 59 loads (36.16 loads of choice, 9.67 loads of
select, 8.38 loads of trim and 4.59 loads of ground beef).
FEEDER CATTLE:
Aside from the May 2025 feeder cattle contract, traders have cautiously
distanced themselves from the feeder cattle market. They're hoping more
fundamental support will develop but have nothing tangible to ease their
jitters. May feeders are up $0.35 at $288.70, August feeders are down $0.47 at
$291.70 and September feeders are down $0.37 at $290.82. Demand still remains
utterly incredible in the countryside, but that's not helping traders in this
exact scenario.
LEAN HOGS:
The only real win thus far throughout the day for the lean hog complex has
been the fact that midday pork cutout values are higher. But in the wake of
sharply lower exports, lower cash prices and some technical hesitancy, the
contracts are back to trading lower. June lean hogs are down $0.70 at $99.45,
July lean hogs are down $0.70 at $99.60 and August lean hogs are down $0.47 at
$98.00. At this point it's likely that packers have fulfilled their bulk needs
in the cash market and will only vaguely participate through the remainder of
the week.
The projected lean hog index for 4/23/2025 is up $0.52 at $87.27, and the
actual index for 4/22/2025 is up $0.67 at $86.75. Hog prices are lower on the
Daily Direct Morning Hog Report, down $1.37 with a weighted average price of
$90.22, ranging from $83.00 to $94.00 on 3,075 head and a five-day rolling
average of $89.72. Pork cutouts total 135.76 loads with 125.91 loads of pork
cuts and 9.85 loads of trim. Pork cutout values: up $0.83, $94.91.
ShayLe Stewart can be reached shayle.stewart@dtn.com
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