Fears over a “meat recession” are growing just ahead of the vacations.
Online meat delivery company Good Ranchers warned consumers on social media that “a meat recession is knocking and provide is about to be tight” as cattle herd continues to shrink.
“The cattle herd has shrunk on account of droughts,” Good Ranchers wrote on its Instagram account. “Our total meat supply for the approaching yr is down significantly. That is certainly one of the foremost reasons a meat recession is coming.”
Walter Kunisch, senior commodities strategist at Hilltop Securities, agreed, telling FOX Business that U.S. beef cattle supplies will proceed to contract throughout 2023, further pushing up beef prices for consumers “well the primary half of 2024.”
“We imagine that an acute and protracted drought within the southwest U.S. is accountable for increased culling of beef cattle which is leaving the U.S. structurally short beef cattle and beef supplies,” Kunish told FOX Business.
In response to America Department of Agriculture (USDA), the variety of cattle moving from pasture right into a feedlot to be conditioned for slaughter in September fell 4% nationwide year-over-year. In certain areas, comparable to Kansas, it was as high as 11%.
The problem is that this drought has been lingering in key U.S. cattle producing states within the Southwest comparable to Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Texas since 2021, in response to Kunish.
Meat producers are warning a few “recession” on account of droughts shrinking cattle herd sizes.REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
“There’s been an acute drought in those states for really the higher a part of 2022,” he said, adding that there hasn’t been much relief, either.
Areas comparable to Texas, and the panhandle which is western Oklahoma and southwest Kansas, specifically haven’t experienced material precipitation since September 2021, in response to data from the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Consequently, the provision of pasture has contracted, he added.
“That drought has been so prolonged, the opportunities to graze or for ranchers to place cattle within the pasture has sharply declined,” which is forcing ranchers to place cattle into feedlots at a faster pace, Kunisch said.
On top of that, breeders are also culling more unbred female cattle at a faster pace, which effectively reduces the provision of future animals for slaughter, in response to Kunisch.
“Those future breeding animals have been liquidated,” he said.
Unfortunately, even when the drought begins to mitigate and pasture conditions improve, “those ranchers will begin to retain female animals for breeding, to extend their breeding stock.”
This implies supplies will turn into even tighter as those ranchers begin to rebuild their breeding herd. It takes roughly 19 to 24 months from when a rancher decides to make use of a female for breeding to when its offspring are able to be slaughtered.
That coupled with the higher cost of certain commodities, comparable to corn and wheat in addition to operating costs, comparable to fuel and labor charges, is creating “persistent higher cattle prices, which may result in higher beef prices,” Kunisch said.