Manitoba cattle auction yards were still keeping busy during the second week of December, as ranchers cleaned out cattle and feedlots looked to fill some pen space.
Roughly 5,600 head of cattle were sold in the province during the week ended Dec. 14, which was well below the 10,000 cattle that moved through the rings the previous week.
Top-end feeder steers 600 pounds and under were typically getting at least C$200 per hundredweight (cwt), with prices as high as C$250 to C$260 cwt for some of the lighter and higher quality animals. Heifers were discounted by about C$20 to C$40 per cwt on average.
Read Also

Farming Smarter receives financial boost from Alberta government for potato research
Farming Smarter near Lethbridge got a boost to its research equipment, thanks to the Alberta government’s increase in funding for research associations.
In the slaughter market, good quality cows were generally selling anywhere from $50 to C$70 per cwt, while bulls were ranging from about C$80 to C$100 per cwt.
With only a few stragglers to round up before Christmas, prices for what is moving were relatively solid.
“We’re winding down,” said Dave Nickel of the Gladstone Auction Mart. From a pricing standpoint, “the highs weren’t any higher, but the second-cut cattle were stronger.”
He said buyers were likely looking to quickly fill some pens before Christmas, while sellers were just cleaning up those animals they don’t want to be bothered with baby-sitting over the winter. “The real ones they wanted to move are already gone,” said Nickel.
Cull cow prices have softened over the past month, with large numbers behind some of that weakness, according to Nickel.
“There was a shortage of feed and more cows came to town than usual,” said Nickel. “The market was just full of cattle.”
“A lot of guys are telling me that they will cull their cow herd down to fit the size of the feed pile instead of trying to buy expensive feed,” said Nickel adding that “it’s fairly tight in our area.”
Looking to the New Year, Nickel was curious about what the market would look like in January. With more calves moving earlier than normal “it will be interesting what our runs will be like.”
Cattle futures at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were choppy during the week, with live cattle hitting some of their best levels in more than a month before running into resistance. The U.S. feeder cattle market was also choppy, bouncing off of nearby lows before running into resistance.