Cattle futures contracts experienced significant declines across the board on Tuesday, with live cattle dropping between 35 to 60 cents at the close. This pullback reflects broader softening in the beef complex as market participants reassess supply-demand dynamics. The fall back in cattle prices continues to weigh on producer sentiment heading into the final weeks of winter.
Price Weakness Extends Across Multiple Contracts
Live cattle contracts were not alone in their struggle. Feeder cattle futures also fell back, posting losses of 50 to 60 cents in mostly weaker trading conditions. The notable exception was January contracts, which managed to post modest gains of 15 cents ahead of expiration. Meanwhile, the CME Feeder Cattle Index climbed $1.16 to $364.73 on January 26, suggesting some stabilization at higher levels despite the session’s general weakness.
The fall back in cash cattle pricing has yet to establish a clear floor, with spot market trading remaining relatively inactive early in the week. When physical trade did occur last week, cattle moved in a range of $233 to $236.50 on a live basis, with dressed beef trading at the $370 level.
Beef Market Softens as Supply Metrics Shift
Wholesale beef prices showed consistent pressure following Tuesday’s USDA Boxed Beef report. The Choice-Select spread widened to $2.92, indicating differentiation in pricing between quality tiers. Choice boxes declined 79 cents to $365.11, while Select boxes fell $1.93 to $365.19, demonstrating the market’s general negative bias.
On the supply side, federally inspected cattle slaughter reached an estimated 112,000 head on Tuesday, bringing the weekly total to 212,000 head. This represents a decline of 7,000 head compared to the previous week and 24,878 head below the same week a year ago. The narrower processing pace reflects both seasonal patterns and market adjustments.
Contract Settlement Snapshot
The broad fall back in cattle futures was evident across multiple contract months:
Feb 26 Live Cattle: Closed at $235.600, down $0.425
Apr 26 Live Cattle: Closed at $237.400, down $0.600
Jun 26 Live Cattle: Closed at $233.250, down $0.375
Jan 26 Feeder Cattle: Closed at $366.850, up $0.150
Mar 26 Feeder Cattle: Closed at $362.000, down $0.600
Apr 26 Feeder Cattle: Closed at $360.650, down $0.550
The consistent fall back pattern across live cattle and feeder cattle contracts suggests underlying weakness in producer confidence, though the magnitude of declines remains within typical trading ranges for the season.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Live Cattle Futures Fall Back Amid Broad-Based Market Weakness
Cattle futures contracts experienced significant declines across the board on Tuesday, with live cattle dropping between 35 to 60 cents at the close. This pullback reflects broader softening in the beef complex as market participants reassess supply-demand dynamics. The fall back in cattle prices continues to weigh on producer sentiment heading into the final weeks of winter.
Price Weakness Extends Across Multiple Contracts
Live cattle contracts were not alone in their struggle. Feeder cattle futures also fell back, posting losses of 50 to 60 cents in mostly weaker trading conditions. The notable exception was January contracts, which managed to post modest gains of 15 cents ahead of expiration. Meanwhile, the CME Feeder Cattle Index climbed $1.16 to $364.73 on January 26, suggesting some stabilization at higher levels despite the session’s general weakness.
The fall back in cash cattle pricing has yet to establish a clear floor, with spot market trading remaining relatively inactive early in the week. When physical trade did occur last week, cattle moved in a range of $233 to $236.50 on a live basis, with dressed beef trading at the $370 level.
Beef Market Softens as Supply Metrics Shift
Wholesale beef prices showed consistent pressure following Tuesday’s USDA Boxed Beef report. The Choice-Select spread widened to $2.92, indicating differentiation in pricing between quality tiers. Choice boxes declined 79 cents to $365.11, while Select boxes fell $1.93 to $365.19, demonstrating the market’s general negative bias.
On the supply side, federally inspected cattle slaughter reached an estimated 112,000 head on Tuesday, bringing the weekly total to 212,000 head. This represents a decline of 7,000 head compared to the previous week and 24,878 head below the same week a year ago. The narrower processing pace reflects both seasonal patterns and market adjustments.
Contract Settlement Snapshot
The broad fall back in cattle futures was evident across multiple contract months:
The consistent fall back pattern across live cattle and feeder cattle contracts suggests underlying weakness in producer confidence, though the magnitude of declines remains within typical trading ranges for the season.