Catching Up on Reports

– David P. Anderson, Professor and Extension Economist, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service

USDA continues to catch up on reports stalled by the shutdown and as part of catching up released the January Cattle on Feed report on Friday, February 22. The report has lost a little bit of it’s normal timeliness, but still contains a few interesting nuggets.

The headline numbers were placements down 1.8 percent, marketings down 0.6 percent, and January 1 Cattle on Feed up 1.7 percent. The year-over-year increase in cattle on feed continues to get smaller. Another month of reduced placements, the fourth in a row below the year before, means that total placements in 2018 were 1 percent below 2017. So fewer cattle were placed from a larger cowherd and larger calf crop.

One of the more interesting numbers in the report was the quarterly estimate of the breakdown of steers and heifers on feed. Heifers on feed totaled 4.41 million head, up 6.2 percent from the year before. That was the most January 1 heifers on feed since 2012. Slightly fewer steers (0.8 percent) were reported on feed compared to a year ago. Slaughter data, through early February, indicated heifer slaughter up 8.5 percent while steer slaughter is down about 0.6 percent.

The delayed February cattle on feed report will be released on March 8. Several confounding factors will affect that report including bad weather in feeding country and rising fed cattle prices.

Cattle Inventory This Week

The Cattle inventory report will be released Thursday February 28th. I expect it will show a small increase in beef cow numbers. We are likely about to the end of the growth part of the cattle cycle, as heifers on feed in the cattle on feed report, and cow and heifer slaughter data indicate. There are several other numbers in the report worth looking at beyond the headline all cattle and calves number. Watch for the number of heifers held back for replacement. That should show another decline as the cycle peaks out. Also watch for the calf crop estimate, in particular for revisions to past years data based on placement patterns. The number of cattle on small grains pasture will be interesting also gauging supplies of feeder cattle to come from wheat pasture country.