LIVESTOCK-CME live cattle again sink to 2-yr bottom, but up from lows

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Published: September 24, 2015

CHICAGO, Sept 24 (Reuters) – Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle futures dropped to a two-year low for a second consecutive session on Thursday, weighed on by seasonally slack beef demand, traders said.

But, they said, late-session bargain hunting and short-covering lifted CME live cattle from morning lows.

Spot-October closed 2.525 cents per lb lower at 130.700 cents, after earlier sinking to a new contract low of 128.725 cents. December finished 1.750 cents lower at 134.000 cents, and marked a new low of 131.700 cents.

“People looked for a reason to buy the technically oversold market, but bearish fundamentals remain in place,” a trader said.

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U.S. livestock: Cattle strength continues

Cattle futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were stronger on Friday, hitting fresh highs to end the week.

Thursday morning’s wholesale choice beef price fell $1.36 to $216.53 per cwt from Wednesday. Select cuts were down $1.31 to $212.20, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said.

So far this week, market-ready, or cash cattle, in Kansas moved at $130 per cwt and $129 to $130 in Nebraska, which were down as much as $6 from last week.

Packers slashed wholesale beef prices to stabilize their dwindling profit margins and clear a backlog of product from freezers, traders and analsyts said.

They said the glut of beef, exacerbated by extra tonnage from heavyweight cattle, pressured market-ready, or cash, cattle prices in recent weeks.

CME feeder cattle September, which expired at noon CDT (1700 GMT), settled 0.725 cents per lb lower at 194.225 cent and nearly inline with the exchange’s feeder cattle index for Sept. 23 at 195.75 cents.

Live cattle futures losses dragged on remaining feeder cattle contracts. October ended 2.275 cents lower at 180.100 cents, after initially posting a new low of 177.100 cents.

HOGS CLIMB ON CASH PRICES

CME lean hogs drew support from short-covering following the morning’s jump in cash values, traders said.

Spot-October hogs closed 1.100 cents per lb higher at 71.650 cents, and December up 1.600 cents to 65.825.

The USDA reported the morning’s Iowa/Minnesota average cash hog price at $69.09 per cwt, up 57 cents from Wednesday.

Some packers hiked cash bids to ensure themselves of supplies for the rest of the week, including a projected 150,000-plus head Saturday slaughter, traders and Midwest hog dealers said.

Investors bought nearby contracts and sold deferred months as they adjusted positions before the government’s quarterly hog report on Friday.

Friday’s report is expected to show slower hog herd growth during the June through August quarter than the same period last year.

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