Lean hog futures fall on profit-taking - CME

Feeder cattle futures weaken, live cattle rise
calendar icon 20 February 2025
clock icon 2 minute read

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) lean hog futures dropped on Wednesday, as traders booked profits following recent gains and as pork cutout prices tumbled, reported Reuters

Feeder cattle futures also weakened, while live cattle rose.

Profit-taking dragged down hog futures after the market neared a contract high on Tuesday, brokers said.

Strong cash prices have recently supported futures, as traders expressed relief that US pork exports have not yet been hurt by President Donald Trump's plans to impose tariffs on trading partners.

Most-active CME April lean hog futures ended down 3.45 cents to finish at 89.75 cents per pound, after hitting their lowest price in more than two weeks earlier in the day.

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) quoted the wholesale pork carcass cutout at $95.22 per hundredweight late on Wednesday, down $3.95 from Tuesday. Belly values sank by $16.75 per hundredweight.

In CME's beef markets, feeder cattle futures faced pressure from corn prices hitting a 16-month high, signalling that livestock producers will face higher costs for animal feed, brokers said. 

Some hog producers are already replacing high-priced corn with wheat in feed rations, one broker said.

Concerns about supply disruptions for cattle also evaporated, after the USDA said following the end of Tuesday's trading session that it would not block imports from Mexico over the latest discovery of a pest there.

Feeder cattle jumped on Tuesday as some traders expected that USDA may suspend imports from Mexico due to the latest discovery of New world screwworm in a cow.

CME March feeder cattle fell 0.7 cent to end at 269.025 cents per pound on Wednesday, after rising earlier to a two-week high.

Meanwhile, April live cattle futures closed up 0.75 cent at 194.775 cents per pound. The market recovered after falling on Tuesday to its lowest price since December 30.

Analysts expect a monthly USDA report on Friday will show that placements of cattle into US feedlots in January rose 2.2% from the previous year, according to a Reuters poll.

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