“Bargains
in the meat case might be hard to find,” said University of Missouri Extension
economist Ron Plain at the recent Ag Marketing Outlook Conference.
Bringing
home the bacon this year requires more cash. Short supplies of cattle and hogs
are pushing prices upward at the sale barn and the supermarket.
Porcine
epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) caused the largest-ever drop in pigs per litter
(PPL) from December to February. PPL plummeted by 5.5 percent. The second
biggest drop was June to August 1988, when PPL dropped 1.68 percent. “We
haven’t seen this magnitude of loss before,” Plain said.
The
spread of PEDV slows during warm weather and appears to have peaked in February
and March.
Pork
inventories declined 3.2 percent in March. Plain said hog prices are expected
to remain well above $100 per hundredweight this summer and decline to the $90s
by the end of the year.
This
translates to higher prices for consumers and producers. The U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics reports that a pound of bacon averaged $5.55 in March, 21
percent more than last year. Ham increased by 12.5 percent to $4.20 per pound.
Prices in the Midwest remain lower than national prices, except for eggs, which
saw a 15 percent increase.
“Where’s
the beef?” might be the next question. The drought of 2012 reduced forage
supplies for cattle and contributed to the lowest number of cattle since 1951,
Plain said. Future cattle prices are predicted to be around $1.40 per pound.
Cow-calf profit margins should remain about $350 per cow, he said.
Plain
said USDA forecasts less beef on the market throughout 2014. Beef producers
should expect strong prices all year. He said cattle slaughter through
mid-April was down 4.8 percent.
The
Bureau of Labor Statistics showed an 11 percent increase in the price of ground
beef to $3.69 per pound in March.
Per
capita meat consumption in 2012 was the lowest since 1991. Plain said consumers
face sticker shock as beef and dairy prices increase, and there is less meat
available for export. Continued drought in California, which produces one of
five dairy cows, will affect the nation’s supply of milk used in dairy
products.
In
row crops, MU Extension specialist David Reinbott said planting progress is behind.
Based on USDA’s March 31 planting intentions report, there will be 3.7 million
fewer corn acres planted this year.
The
national season-average corn price should be around $4.40 per bushel, but that
could fall to just under $4 if ending stocks are over 1.8 billion, Reinbott
said. The price may be nearer $5 if ending stocks are closer to 1.2 billion
bushels. New crop prices could peak in May and trend downward to a seasonal low
in October if planting is not delayed much and there is little significant heat
or dryness.
Reinbott
said U.S. producers are expected to plant fewer acres of corn, but soybean
acres could be more than 5 million.
Reinbott
also said civil unrest in Ukraine may drive up wheat prices across the world.
Ukraine exports 6 percent of the world’s wheat.
Domestically,
drought coupled with freezing temperatures in late March caused about one-third
of the nation’s wheat crop to be in poor to very poor condition in key states
such as Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
(by Linda Giest, MU Writer)
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