Price slides are a fact of life in marketing feeder cattle. Here’s a look at how it works.

Nevil Speer

September 20, 2018

2 Min Read
How feeder cattle price slides work, and why

Over the past month, this column has focused on the feeder cattle market and various value drivers in an effort to help producers better understand market principles while marketing is fresh on their mind. Previous columns have focused on: 

Most of that discussion is fairly straightforward and generally easy to illustrate and explain.  That’s especially true given that all of it’s categorical. For example, cattle are either weaned or they aren’t – and there’s a distinct value difference between the two categories.

 september-2018-feeder-cattle-slides.png

But when it comes to dealing with price slides and/or weight stops (never mind shrink for this discussion), my experience has been those principles are generally more difficult to understand.   Price slides effectively adjust the price downward as cattle exceed the contract base weight.  Meanwhile, weight stops establish a hard break – any weight beyond the weight stop will not be paid for, thereby establishing a total dollar ceiling.  

This week’s illustration highlights a straightforward example for 640-pound calves priced at $155 per cwt with a $10 per cwt right-side slide (a slide applies only to the cattle as they get heavier), no slide window (zero tolerance beyond the base weight) and a 25-pound weight stop in place. 

There are any number of combinations that could be created, including addition of a two-way slide, inclusion of slide windows and/or removal of the weight stop. The numbers are for example purposes only and not meant to be suggestive nor reflect any implications about what these values should be.

Several things are important. First, the graph shows the price slide kicking in at 640 pounds. Accordingly, the effective market price begins to decline beyond that point. Second, the weight stop kicks in at 665 pounds. Therefore, any extra weight beyond that point is essentially free to the buyer. Note that total revenue maximizes at the weight stop – not at the base weight. 

It’s critically important to understand those relationships before entering into a contract and subsequently making delivery. How are you looking to price your cattle? How do these factors play when you decide how to market your calf crop? Leave your thoughts in the comments section below. 

Nevil Speer serves as an industry consultant and is based in Bowling Green, KY. Contact him at [email protected].

About the Author(s)

Nevil Speer

Nevil Speer serves as an industry consultant and is based in Bowling Green, KY.

Nevil Speer has extensive experience and involvement with the livestock and food industry including various service and consultation projects spanning such issues as market competition, business and economic implications of agroterrorism, animal identification, assessment of price risk and market volatility on the producer segment, and usage of antibiotics in animal agriculture.
 
Dr. Speer writes about many aspects regarding agriculture and the food industry with regular contribution to BEEF and Feedstuffs.  He’s also written several influential industry white papers dealing with issues such as changing business dynamics in the beef complex, producer decision-making, and country-of-origin labeling.
 
He serves as a member of the Board of Directors for the National Institute for Animal Agriculture.
 
Dr. Speer holds both a PhD in Animal Science and a Master’s degree in Business Administration.

Contact him at [email protected].

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