"Beef's a staple at this point, so at many points, it's inelastic on price," said Jake Dollarhide, the chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which oversees about $75 million. "I don't see consumer habits changing at these price levels."
After years of high feed costs and drought, the domestic herd on January 1 slid to 87.7 million head, the fewest to start a year since 1951 and the seventh straight decline, US Department of Agriculture data show.
Beef demand peaks at this time of year as warm weather encourages outdoor grilling. At grocery stores, ground beef jumped 17 per cent in the 12 months through April to a record $3.808 a pound on average, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The USDA said May 23 that beef and veal prices will rise 5.5 per cent to 6.5 per cent this year, more than any food group.
The cost of beef for Denver-based Chipotle rose 25 per cent in April from the fourth quarter of 2013, a "pretty dramatic" increase, Chief Financial Officer Jack Hartung said at a conference on June 11. The restaurant chain is increasing menu prices, with steak items fetching 70 cents to 80 cents more than chicken, up from a 35-cent premium.
Expanding the cattle herd to boost beef output is a slow process. The gestation for calves is nine months and animals take as long as 22 months to reach slaughter weight. Feedlots buy calves weighing 500 to 800 pounds raised mostly on pastures and then feed them a diet of mostly corn until they reach 1,200 pounds and can be sold to beef plants.
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The cattle rally is boosting costs for some ranchers. Sharrock began the year buying more than 80 cows at $1,400 to $1,500 each to expand the number of calves he can sell to feedlots. After prices surged to as much as $2,100 at the end of May, he stopped buying cows because they were too expensive.
To supplement his income, Sharrock also buys for other ranchers. At the Greenville Livestock Auction in Illinois, about 50 miles east of St. Louis, he bought 41 head on May 28 at about twice the price of two years ago.
At grocery stores, ground beef jumped 17 per cent in the 12 months through April to a record $3.808 a pound on average. Photo / Thinkstock
High prices may undermine the rally. With beef supply down, per-capita consumption will drop in 2015 as chicken rises and pork remains steady, the USDA said. Expanded output of cheaper meat would keep prices in check, said Christopher Narayanan at Societe Generale in New York.
"If we're going to see another rally in live-cattle prices, we'd have to see continued strength in beef prices, but a lot of that would depend on the pork industry and the poultry industry," Narayanan, the head of agricultural commodities research, said in a May 12 interview.
The 18 per cent drop in corn prices from a year ago also is creating an incentive for ranchers to expand, with the USDA predicting a record domestic harvest later this year.
Even a move to expand the herd may keep supplies limited through next year as ranchers hold more cows for breeding rather than slaughter. Purchases by feedlots in March and April fell below year-earlier levels after starting the year higher and are expected to remain limited into 2015, USDA data show. As of April 1, feedlots had 6 per cent fewer heifers than a year earlier, while steers rose 2 per cent.
"The stars continue to line-up for a lasting, record-high, feeder-cattle market with sound fundamental supply and demand data supporting the surge," Corbitt Wall, the officer in charge of the St. Joseph, Missouri, branch of the USDA's Livestock Market News, said in a June 6 report.
Persistent drought also limits expansion by damaging pastures. In Texas, 69 per cent of the state is in moderate to exceptional drought as of June 10, the fourth straight year of dry weather for this time of year, according to US Drought Monitor data. The USDA on June 11 trimmed its expectations for 2014 beef output by 0.6 per cent to 24.5 billion pounds.
"The ever-tightening supply of cattle on the ground and the amount of beef we're able to bring the consumer, that's not going to change any time soon," said Altin Kalo, an economist with Steiner Consulting Group in Manchester, New Hampshire. "It'll be three years down the road to even start to make a dent."
- Bloomberg