Houston Chronicle

Meat lovers will have lots to beef about

-

A spike in corn prices is keeping cattle out of feedlots, where they fatten up on the grain for months before going to slaughter.

That means fewer animals coming to the market in the months to come — conditions that can result in expensive beef at grocery stores.

“Higher prices for the next two to four years are pretty much set in stone,” Rich Nelson, chief strategist at Allendale Inc., said of both beef and cattle.

Beef prices already have seen a round of inflation, even touching a record high in grocery stores last year after some slaughterh­ouses closed.

Because of the closures, cattle ranchers had nowhere to send animals, so they kept them out of the marketing pipeline. Now, high feed prices are eating away at already slim profits, leading ranchers to keep even more animals grazing on pastures, instead of bulking them up at feedlots for processing.

There isn’t enough corn available globally from major suppliers such as Ukraine and Brazil, so importers are buying more from the U.S., leaving less for domestic feed use.

Corn futures in Chicago are close to seven-year highs, and reached as much as $5.415 a bushel this month. Prices for corn in cattle-feeding areas such as Texas are nearing $6 a bushel, U.S. Department of Agricultur­e data showed.

The higher corn prices will begin affecting cattle flows this month, Nelson said, with beef prices rising for consumers later this year by 3 percent.

 ?? Nati Harnik / Associated Press ?? Farmer Tim Novotny of Wahoo, Neb., shreds male corn plants in a field of seed corn in 2018.
Nati Harnik / Associated Press Farmer Tim Novotny of Wahoo, Neb., shreds male corn plants in a field of seed corn in 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States