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Grimes and Plain Weekly Hog OutlookCHICAGO - Oct 13/06 - SNS -- Following is a week ending hog market comment from the University of Missouri - Columbia's Glenn Grimes and Ron Plain. Cash hog prices came under substantial pressure this week as packers made an attempt to improve their margin. Top live prices this Friday morning were $2.75 to $5.00 per cwt lower than 7 days earlier. Average weighted negotiated carcass priced hogs this Friday morning were $1.04 higher to $2.26 per cwt lower than a week earlier. The top live prices this Friday morning for select markets were: Peoria $42.00 per cwt, St. Paul $43.00 per cwt, Sioux Falls N/A per cwt and interior Missouri $44.50 per cwt. The cutout value per cwt of carcass on Thursday afternoon this week was up $114 per cwt from a week earlier at $69.56 per cwt. The cutout prices for each wholesale cut on Thursday afternoon were: loins up $3.18 per cwt from a week earlier at $80.99 per cwt, Boston butts at $76.07 up $0.66 per cwt from 7 days earlier, hams up $1.07 per cwt from last week at $73.63 per cwt, and bellies unchanged from a week earlier at $77.03 per cwt. Feeder pig prices this week at United Tel-o-Auction were mixed compared to two weeks earlier. Light-weight pigs were $5-6 per cwt lower and heavier weights were $5-6 per cwt higher than 14 days earlier. Corn prices have been very erratic this week with high prices making new contract highs. Most observers believe hog producers will need to plan on cash corn prices near $3 per bushel in a couple of years because of the demand for corn from the ethanol industry. With all other factors held constant, the industry will likely be required to downsize some to maintain profitability for the average cost producers. If the long-term elasticity of demand for live hogs is close to the average of the past 10 years, the industry will need to reduce production 2-3% in order to cover the additional costs. However, if the elasticity of demand for the long run is close to the elasticity prior to 1994, the industry will need to downsize 5-7%. Remember for each $0.50 per bushel increase in corn price the average producer's costs will increase by about $2.50 per cwt of live weight. Sow slaughter continues to run some above a year earlier. For the 4 weeks ending September 30, sow slaughter was up 4.0% from 12 months earlier. For this same time-period, however, gilt slaughter was also up some from a year earlier. Breeding stock imports from Canada are up, but only 2-3% from a year earlier. This data does not indicate producers are changing the breeding herd very much in either direction. Slaughter this Friday set a new daily record high for one day at 425 thousand under Federal Inspection. Slaughter this week under Federal Inspection was 2,166 thousand head, up 2.2% from last year. Issued by Glenn Grimes and Ron Plain University of Missouri - Columbia DISCLAIMER: Futures and options trading involve substantial risk. The valuation of futures and options may fluctuate, and as a result, clients may lose more then their original investment. In no event should the content of this website be construed as an express of an implied promise, guarantee or implication by of from the author(s) that you will profit or that losses can or will be limited in any manner whatsoever. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Information provided on this website is intended solely for informative purposes and is obtained from sources believed to be reliable. Information is in no way guaranteed. No guarantee of any kind is implied or possible where projections of future conditions are attempted. Information on this page is derived from third parties and is deemed to be reliable. STAT Communications Ltd. accepts no responsibility for errors, omissions or inaccuracies in any of the material presented on this web site. Opinions expressed on this web site are those of the respective individuals and/or institutions and do not represent the opinions of STAT Communications Ltd. or its management.
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