Hog slaughter running high in the US

Published 2023년 1월 23일

Tridge summary

Hog slaughter in the US has been higher than expected, leading to a decrease in hog prices. The USDA predicts a slight increase in global pork production in 2023, while US pork exports are expected to decrease and retail pork prices are at their lowest since February 2022. The wide price spread between wholesale and retail pork prices has put pressure on hog prices, leading to losses for Iowa hog farms.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

In recent weeks hog slaughter has been running above expectations. The heavy weight market hog inventory in USDA's December Hogs and Pigs report implied slaughter would be down 1.9% over the last eight weeks. Actual hog slaughter was down only 0.3%. The higher-than-predicted hog slaughter could be due to winter weather disrupting hog flow or more likely to a surplus of hogs relative to expectations. Ron Plain The increased hog slaughter appears to be having a negative impact on hog prices. It looks like January hog prices will come in below those in December. The futures market expects hog prices to increase each month til July then to decline each month until the year ends. Ron Plain Hog prices in December averaged $58.96/cwt for 51-52% lean (live weight). That was the lowest month since January 2022. For the year, 51-52% lean hogs averaged $71.13/cwt (live weight) the highest since 2014. USDA is predicting an average of $68/cwt in 2023. Per capita pork consumption averaged 51.1 ...

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