Follow us on

EN

Request a DemoAbout Us
EMEAT - Market Data, Analytical Tools, and Insights for the North American Meat Industry
EMEAT - Market Data, Analytical Tools, and Insights for the North American Meat Industry
Data & Analytics PricingNews & BlogsBus. DirectoryMarketplaceEventsAdvertise with Us
Beef Cattle Supplies Fall to the Lowest Level in 64 Years

Beef Cattle Supplies Fall to the Lowest Level in 64 Years

Shrinking cattle supplies continues to be the story in the cattle market and part of the reason cattle prices continue to climb. USDA’s annual Cattle Inventory Report released Friday shows the U.S. cattle inventory shrunk another 1% over the past year, now at 86.7 million head. And when you look at just the number of beef cows, that inventory fell 1%, now sitting at 27.9 million head.

Other highlights in the January Cattle report include:

- Of the 86.7 million head inventory of all cattle and calves, cows and heifers that have calved totaled 37.2 million

- The number of milk cows in the U.S. increased slightly to 9.35 million.

- U.S. calf crop was estimated at 33.5 million head, down slightly from previous year.

- USDA NASS says the number of cattle on feed were at 14.3 million head, down 1% from 2024

“The big takeaway as we see it was the notable upward revision of last year’s numbers, and we expected that. The past year’s kills have simply been larger than implied by last year’s survey. I think most in the market anticipated that. Not sure if the Algo traders had,” says Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist with StoneX Group.

“Everything looks pretty in line until you get to that beef replacement heifer number, and I feel like that’s kind of a little bit of a surprise as we’ve been talking about heifer retention,” Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek, Sioux Center, Iowa told AgDay’s Michelle Rook. “We’re thinking it’s happening and the last cattle on feed report showed a few less heifers on feed but with a 101 % estimate coming in at 99% we’re still off of year ago levels and still not seeing that rebuild in the cow herd.”

Questions about this Article?:

Sign Upto comment

This website stores cookies on your computer. These cookies are used to collect information about how you interact with our website and allow us to remember you. We use this information in order to improve and customize your browsing experience and for analytics and metrics about our visitors on this website. To find out more about the cookies we use, see ourPrivacy Policy.