CME Reports Live Cattle Futures End Lower While Lean Hogs Are Mixed
Chicago Mercantile Exchange live cattle futures fell Thursday for a second straight session, pressured by technical selling and expectations of ample U.S. summertime supplies of cattle and beef, traders said
by Tom Polansek – Reuters
“We’re still just in the middle of June, and we know we have a big supply coming in,” said Scott Varilek, a broker at Kooima and Kaemingk Commodities Inc.
Additional pressure on live cattle futures stemmed from a 1% decline in CME feeder cattle, which fell in response to rising costs for corn, the primary feedgrain for cattle.
Chicago Board of Trade corn futures neared a four-year high on worries about U.S. crop prospects after widespread planting delays this spring.
“At the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, most actively traded August live cattle settled down 0.475 cent at 104.725 cents per pound”
At the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, most actively traded August live cattle settled down 0.475 cent at 104.725 cents per pound.
CME August feeder cattle ended down 1.575 cents at 136.225 cents per pound.
CME lean hog futures closed mixed. July lean hogs ended down 1.000 cent at 83.375 cents per pound, while August hogs rose 0.300 cent at 82.825 cents per pound.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported export sales of U.S. 2019 pork in the week to June 6 at 23,100 tonnes, including 2,400 tonnes to China. Weekly export sales of 2019 U.S. beef totaled 16,400 tonnes.
additional reporting by Julie Ingwersen in Chicago Editing by James Dalgleish
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