BEEF Banter
Record cattle prices sound like nothing but good news, until you look at the risks stacked behind them. We’re Sarah Muirhead, Clint Peck, and Nevil Speer, and we open with a clear-eyed cattle market update: fed cattle trade at record levels, feeder cattle values that reflect intense beef demand, and the uncomfortable truth that big numbers make risk management more important, not less. From there, the conversation shifts to what may be the real driver of summer decisions: drought. Dry conditions across major cattle regions are tightening grass and stockwater, raising the odds of cows moving to town or into feedyards. We also talk through the El Nino chatter and why credible ag weather analysis matters when your next move depends on moisture, not headlines. Then we get into the politics that keep circling the beef industry, especially antitrust and packer concentration. We question why decades-old concentration levels are framed as a new crisis, and how “foreign ownership” talking points often ignore how capital and equipment flow through agriculture. Clint also breaks down the “hamburger from 100 cows” myth, why commingling is normal across food processing, and why it shouldn’t be used to undermine confidence in beef. We close with two big public-policy stories: a Washington state wetlands dispute over stock ponds that could test jury trial rights, and federal grazing expansion plans on BLM and Forest Service lands facing threatened lawsuits. If you care about cattle markets, ranching resilience, and the future of public lands grazing, this one is for you. Subscribe, share the episode with a producer friend, and leave us a review with the question you want us to tackle next.
14 episodios
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