U.S. livestock: CME cattle, hog futures weak as feeding costs rise

Corn's 'unending rally' drags on feeder cattle

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: April 27, 2022

, ,

CME June 2022 live cattle (candlesticks) with 20-, 30-, 40- and 200-day moving averages (pink, brown, dark red and black lines). (Barchart)

Chicago | Reuters — CME cattle futures fell on Wednesday as traders assessed higher feeding costs due to a sharp gains in corn.

Hog futures were also weak, falling for the sixth time in seven sessions, with prospects for more COVID-19 lockdowns in China further chilling the already weak export demand from the world’s top consumer of pork.

Feeder cattle contracts notched the biggest decline, with the most-active August contract shedding 2.4 per cent and hitting its lowest since Nov. 2.

“The unending rally in corn is certainly the focus,” said Rich Nelson, analyst at Allendale Inc.

Read Also

Detail from the front of the CBOT building in Chicago. (Vito Palmisano/iStock/Getty Images)

U.S. grains: Soybean futures set two-week high on US weather worry, soyoil rally

Chicago Board of Trade soybean futures touched a two-week high on Friday on worries that heat may threaten U.S. crops and expectations that the country’s biofuel policy would boost demand for soyoil, analysts said.

Chicago Board of Trade corn futures jumped to their highest in nearly 10 years on Thursday.

Benchmark June lean hogs settled down 0.825 cent at 110.35 cents/lb. (all figures US$).

Technical support for June hogs was noted at the low end of its 20-day Bollinger range for the second day in a row.

CME June live cattle futures dropped 1.225 cents to settle at 135.025 cents/lb., falling below their 20-, 30-, 40- and 200-day moving averages.

CME feeder cattle also were weaker, with May dropping 3.375 cents to 157.35 cents/lb. and most-active August feeders down 4.2 cents at 168.95 cents/lb.

— Mark Weinraub is a Reuters commodities correspondent in Chicago.

About The Author

Mark Weinraub

Mark Weinraub is a Reuters correspondent covering grain markets from Chicago. Additional reporting for Reuters by Michael Hirtzer in Chicago, Naveen Thukral in Singapore and Sybille de La Hamaide in Paris.

explore

Stories from our other publications