Canada: Feeder market continues downward slide

Published 2021년 11월 16일

Tridge summary

Western Canadian yearling prices were steady to $2 lower, and calves traded $2-$4 below last week's levels due to the first major snowstorm of the season in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, which has led to a risk discount for adverse weather and concerns about the availability of barley over the winter. The quality of yearlings was variable, and calves were the feature last week with varied selling prices across the Prairies, despite some U.S. buying interest. Concerns about feed grain costs and the availability of barley in the future have led to discussion about risk management for feedlots.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Compared to last week, western Canadian yearling prices were steady to $2 lower; calves traded $2-$4 below week-ago levels. Saskatchewan and Manitoba experienced their first major snowstorm of the season last week. The market tends to incorporate a risk discount for adverse weather as buyers factor in higher death loss. Also, major feedlot operators believe barley will be difficult to find over the winter. Imported corn prices continue to trend higher. Margins in deferred months look like buyers will barely cover feed grain costs. The quality of yearlings was quite variable and overall supplies of 850-plus-lb. cattle are limited at this time of year; therefore, larger-frame lower-flesh 900-pounders held value. Fleshier yearlings were discounted as much as $6 off average prices. Calves were the feature last week with many pre-sort sales held across the Prairies. Major Alberta operations focused on local cattle and scale-down orders were evident. U.S. buying interest surfaced on ...
Source: Grainews

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