U.S. livestock: Hogs weaken on profit taking, cattle mixed

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: February 20, 2020

, ,

CME April 2020 lean hogs with 20-, 50- and 100-day moving averages. (Barchart)

Chicago | Reuters — Chicago Mercantile Exchange hog futures fell from a 3-1/2 week high on Thursday on a round of mild profit-taking following four straight days of gains.

Live cattle futures also were lower while feeder cattle contracts edged higher, their sixth straight day of gains.

CME lean hog futures for April delivery ended down 0.7 cent to settle at 66.875 cents/lb. (all figures US$). The contract found support at its 20-day moving average.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates China’s hog production in 2019 to be down 195 million head from 2018 due to African swine fever, chief economist Rob Johansson said Thursday.

Read Also

Photo: Robin Booker

China rapeseed meal futures see largest one-day gain in almost three months after Xi–Carney talks

China’s most active Zhengzhou rapeseed (canola) meal futures posted their largest daily gain in nearly three months on Monday, after Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in South Korea last week without securing a breakthrough on tariffs.

The department expects the lethal pig disease to kill another 80 million pigs in 2020, he said at a conference in Washington.

China’s sow herd increased by 1.2 per cent in January from December, the ministry of agriculture and rural affairs said on Thursday, the fourth consecutive month in which the country’s breeding herd number had increased.

Benchmark CME April live cattle futures settled down 1.65 cents at 119.15 cents/lb. CME March feeder cattle futures ended up 0.025 cent at 140.8 cents/lb.

Traders were waiting for USDA’s monthly Cattle on Feed report on Friday. Analysts estimated that the amount of cattle in U.S. feedlots as of Feb. 1 was 102.4 per cent of the February 2019 total.

— 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