The Cattle Market Guys Podcast

Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-14-2026

9 min · 14. juli 2026
episode Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-14-2026 cover

Beskrivelse

Cash cattle prices tumbled seven dollars this week, but feeder and stocker marketings ran nearly 40% below the three-year average—creating the kind of thin, choppy market that can swing hard in either direction. Add in a stunning USDA export data error that slashed beef sales figures by 90%, and producers have a lot to untangle this week. Brock and Jim break down the latest cash and futures data, noting a split market where lighter steers are sliding while heavier weights creep up. They dig into why marketings are running so far below normal, with Jim drawing parallels to the 1996 drought-driven liquidation in West Texas and sharing a firsthand story about how timing flexibility made a real difference in per-head pricing. The conversation also covers the July WASDE report's surprisingly bullish Q3 revision despite short-term cash weakness. On the trade front, they unpack USDA's dramatic export data correction involving Chile and Italy, rising beef imports, and what this means for trust in federal reporting. A look at South Africa's shifting FMD vaccine policy highlights how global disease management ties into U.S. export competitiveness. Finally, Brock and Jim cover USDA's expanded metals testing requirements taking effect July 20th and the $80 million in federal support aimed at helping small processors manage rising compliance costs.

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Alle episoder

25 Episoder

episode Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-17-2026 cover

Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-17-2026

Cattle futures just hit their lowest close since March, and it's not from one bad day — it's three straight sessions of chart-driven selling stacked on weak cash trade and sagging wholesale beef prices. Brock and Jim break down why the board lost roughly eight dollars in under a month, and why hog futures climbing at the same time proves this is a cattle-specific correction, not a broad protein demand collapse. This week's Cattle Market Guys episode opens with a full data snapshot: five-hundred to five-forty-nine weight steers show a clear three-week price slide, while six-hundred to six-forty-nine weight cattle have actually gained ground over the past month despite recent softness. Brock and Jim dig into the forecasts for both weight classes, then pivot into a deep dive on the futures decline, referencing reporting from The Cattle Site and Beef Magazine's "Recency Bias and Things That Never Happen" piece on cowherd expansion. Jim shares a real-world comparison to the 1993 summer market pullback, offering perspective on why producers shouldn't panic on chart-driven weakness — but shouldn't ignore it either. The episode closes with a look at regulatory and land-use pressures facing ranchers, including a New Zealand study linking farm nitrate pollution to premature births even below legal limits, the FAO's involvement in Canada's International Year of Rangelands tour, and a third, more sobering land-use story. It's a wide-ranging Friday wrap covering cash cattle prices, futures trends, cattle market analysis, and the policy conversations shaping the beef industry heading into next week.

17. juli 20267 min
episode Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-14-2026 cover

Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-14-2026

Cash cattle prices tumbled seven dollars this week, but feeder and stocker marketings ran nearly 40% below the three-year average—creating the kind of thin, choppy market that can swing hard in either direction. Add in a stunning USDA export data error that slashed beef sales figures by 90%, and producers have a lot to untangle this week. Brock and Jim break down the latest cash and futures data, noting a split market where lighter steers are sliding while heavier weights creep up. They dig into why marketings are running so far below normal, with Jim drawing parallels to the 1996 drought-driven liquidation in West Texas and sharing a firsthand story about how timing flexibility made a real difference in per-head pricing. The conversation also covers the July WASDE report's surprisingly bullish Q3 revision despite short-term cash weakness. On the trade front, they unpack USDA's dramatic export data correction involving Chile and Italy, rising beef imports, and what this means for trust in federal reporting. A look at South Africa's shifting FMD vaccine policy highlights how global disease management ties into U.S. export competitiveness. Finally, Brock and Jim cover USDA's expanded metals testing requirements taking effect July 20th and the $80 million in federal support aimed at helping small processors manage rising compliance costs.

14. juli 20269 min
episode Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-10-2026 cover

Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-10-2026

Cattle inventories just hit their lowest levels since the 1950s, yet Walmart slashed ground beef prices 12% after political pressure — and cattle futures have now fallen for seven straight sessions. Brock and Jim break down how tight supply, soft retail pricing, and volatile feed costs are colliding to create a confusing market picture for producers heading into summer. In this Friday wrap for the week of July 10th, Brock and Jim dig into feeder cattle price data across weight classes, noting strength in the 600-649 category alongside softening in lighter 500-549 weight steers. They unpack the disconnect between Walmart's politically-driven price cut and actual farm-gate values, referencing reporting from the Cattle Site, Beef Magazine, and CoBank showing beef demand staying firm despite broader food inflation. Jim draws on his 1996 experience with feedyard margins during a corn price spike to explain why today's combination of falling cattle futures and rising feed grain costs demands caution on placements. The episode closes with a look at global trade dynamics, including rising US beef export value despite lower volume, improving access in Taiwan and Korea, and Brazil's record beef export growth capturing Chinese demand. Jim recalls the 2003 BSE case and its impact on export markets as a warning against assuming trade access stays constant. Domestic processing expansion news rounds out a discussion on quality, competition, and long-term market resilience in the cattle industry.

10. juli 202611 min
episode Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-7-2026 cover

Cattle Market Guys - Tuesday Check In 7-7-2026

Packer losses have deepened to a staggering $295 per head as corn futures surge and boxed beef values soften — and that squeeze from both directions is putting hedging strategy front and center for cattle producers right now. Meanwhile, Brazil just raised its full-year trade surplus forecast to $90 billion, fueled by record beef exports that are eating into US market share. In this Tuesday market update, Brock and Jim break down the latest feeder cattle cash prices, including five to six weight steers holding steady near $457 per hundredweight and six-weight steers easing to $415.87. They dig into live cattle futures volatility tied to rising corn costs and softening cash trade, with Jim drawing on his 1996 experience with margin calls and over-hedged positions to explain why liquidity matters as much as price protection. The conversation then shifts to global beef trade, covering Brazil's record export surge, tightening antimicrobial inspection rules ahead of an EU deadline, and a political push to suspend proposed US tariffs tied to Brazil's October election. Domestic policy developments, including new tariff-rate quota legislation for imported beef, cattle, and lamb, round out the trade discussion. Finally, Brock and Jim examine the tightening US cattle supply picture, with total beef production projected down 4.5 to 5 percent year-over-year and cold storage reserves shrinking. Drawing parallels to the mid-1990s herd liquidation era, they explain why today's tight supply numbers may not fully hit cash prices for months, and why producers should be watching futures, trade, and production trends together rather than in isolation.

7. juli 202611 min
episode Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-3-2026 cover

Cattle Market Guys - Week Wrap Up 7-3-2026

The Trump administration just dropped a bombshell: USMCA will not be extended, triggering a 10-year wind-down clock that has farm groups sounding alarms across the agricultural sector. With feeder cattle prices hitting historic highs and the cattle herd now the tightest since the 1950s, this week's Cattle Market Guys breaks down why the market is bracing for impact before the data even arrives. Brock and Jim open with a deep look at current feeder steer pricing, showing steady climbs across weight classes and a sharp jump in futures contracts over just five weeks. They then dive into the USMCA wind-down announcement, examining the fractured US-Mexico-Canada dynamics and new tariff-rate quota legislation targeting live cattle, beef, and lamb imports. Jim draws a compelling parallel to the 1994 NAFTA rollout, reminding producers that fear-driven herd decisions often backfire before real trade data emerges. The second half tackles supply fundamentals, unpacking the June Cattle on Feed report showing feedlot inventories rising for a second straight month, even as total beef production is projected to fall 4.5-5% in 2026. Brock and Jim explain why more cattle in feedlots doesn't mean more beef supply, and how the tightest cattle herd since the 1950s is squeezing everyone from jerky producers to retail meat counters. It's a data-driven, historically grounded conversation about navigating uncertainty without panic—essential listening for cattle producers watching both trade policy and herd economics collide this summer.

3. juli 20267 min