CME live cattle fall as as cash prices plunge; feeders down limit

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Published: January 15, 2015

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By Theopolis Waters

CHICAGO, Jan 15 (Reuters) – Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle ended lower in volatile trade on Thursday, pressured by residual fund liquidation and the steep drop in cash prices, traders said.

CME live cattle’s selloff extended losses to eight straight days.

The February contract’s limit-down move on Tuesday delayed the “roll” by funds out of that contract into back months.

So far, slaughter or cash cattle in Kansas and Texas traded at $164 per hundredweight (cwt), down as much as $6 from last week, feedlot sources said.

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Chicago Board of Trade corn futures extended slight gains on Tuesday as short covering and bargain buying continued to support a rebound from contract lows reached during the previous session.

Packers cut cash bids based on current futures prices and the potential for increased supplies ahead.

And, the morning’s mixed wholesale beef market suggests pushback from retailers against near record-high prices for product, a trader said.

Thursday morning’s choice wholesale beef slipped 65 cents per hundredweight from Wednesday to $263.16. Select were up $1.04 to $254.72, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.

Despite Thursday’s selloff, futures remained at a sizable discount to cash prices which stirred sporadic bargain hunting.

Investors on Friday will even up positions before Monday’s U.S. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday while waiting for prices for unsold cattle.

Live cattle February closed 1.550 cents per pound lower at 154.200 cents, and April 1.525 cents lower at 152.800 cents.

CME feeder cattle fell hard, with nearby contracts down the 4.500-cents per lb. price limit, on technical selling and live cattle market losses.

January and March finished at 215.650 cents and 205.600 cents, respectively. Feeder cattle’s trading limit will expanded to 6.750 cents on Friday.

HOGS CLOSE MIXED

CME hogs drew pressure from weak fundamentals, but were supported by speculative buying in anticipation of a seasonal cash price turnaround, traders said.

February closed 0.400 cents per lb. lower at 75.625 cents, and April ended up 0.350 cents to 78.350 cents.

Slaughter hog prices in the Midwest on Thursday morning sold steady to down 50 cents per cwt. from Wednesday, regional hog dealers said.

Thursday morning’s wholesale pork price sagged $1.31 per cwt. from Wednesday to $83.00, USDA said.

The break in wintry weather increased the delayed movement of hogs that farmers held back because of icy roads and to keep heat in swine buildings at that time, an analyst said.

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