130 THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION

Similar documents
Marketing Slaughter Hogs Under Contract

US Imported Beef Market A Weekly Update

Hog Marketing Practices and Competition Questions. John D. Lawrence Extension Livestock Economist Iowa State University

Animal Welfare During a Disease Outbreak. Dr. Patrick Webb Director, Swine Health Programs

U.S. Beef and Cattle Imports and Exports: Data Issues and Impacts on Cattle Prices

Swine EPD Terminology

This Little Piggy Math in the Pig Barn

Beef Cattle Frame Scores

FUTURES TRADING OF LIVE BEEF CATTLE (HEDGING) by Clarence C. Bowen

Stocker Grazing or Grow Yard Feeder Cattle Profit Projection Calculator Users Manual and Definitions

Live, In-the-Beef, or Formula: Is there a Best Method for Selling Fed Cattle?

and resources that are needed to operate a dairy farm. One of the practices commonly used

Understanding Grid Marketing: How Quality Grades and Grid Conditions Affect Carcass Value. By Pete Anderson Ag Knowledge Services

EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SHOWPIGS BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK. ELITE SWINE INC.

Interpretation of Financial Statements

Understanding and Using the Basis by John C. McKissick and George A. Shumaker Extension Agricultural Economists-Marketing

S P E C I F I C GRAVITY AS A MEASURE PORK CARCASS LEANNESS

Total Income from Farming in the United Kingdom. First estimate for 2015

Beef Demand: What is Driving the Market?

Eastern Kentucky Meat Goat Budget Analysis

Cost of Production. Cost of Production. Cost of Production!

Econ 202 Final Exam. Table 3-1 Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pound of: Meat Potatoes Farmer 8 2 Rancher 4 5

Breeds of Swine. Berkshire. Chester White

Soybean Supply and Demand Forecast

Grid Base Prices and Premiums-Discounts Over Time

An Assessment of Prices of Natural Gas Futures Contracts As A Predictor of Realized Spot Prices at the Henry Hub

Introduction to Futures Markets

With lectures 1-8 behind us, we now have the tools to support the discussion and implementation of economic policy.

Beef Cattle Breeds and Biological Types Scott P. Greiner, Extension Animal Scientist, Virginia Tech

Supplement Unit 1. Demand, Supply, and Adjustments to Dynamic Change

INTRODUCTION TO COTTON OPTIONS Blake K. Bennett Extension Economist/Management Texas Cooperative Extension, The Texas A&M University System

Financing Capital Requirements

Forward exchange rates

Kansas State University Lean Value Marketing Program

CENTRE FOR TAX POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION

Commodity Futures and Options

Pacific County Market Livestock Project 4-H/FFA Organization Livestock Show and Auction

Definitions of Marketing Terms

Agricultural Income Tax Issues - An Educational Module Offered by the University of Wyoming

THE EFFECT OF SCIENCE IN COCOA PRODUCTION FARMER S POINT OF VIEW

BREEDS OF SHEEP FOR COMMERCIAL MILK PRODUCTION

Understanding and Using Basis for Livestock Producer Marketing Management 1

S.W.O.T. Analysis Identifying Your Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats

PREPARATION MATERIAL FOR THE GRADUATE RECORD EXAMINATION (GRE)

International Trade and. Exchange Rate Volatility

Syndicated Revenue Loans. Secured Lines of Credit

MEASURING A NATION S INCOME

Company Credit Report

SOURCES OF FARM POWER

Financial Market Instruments

Swine Feeding and Fitting Guidelines. Ryan Harrell Dec. 2008

Leasing FINANCIAL PROCEDURE 19. OWNER: Head of Financial Control

Agribusiness Management, its meaning, nature and scope, types Of management tasks and responsibilities

Explain how Employee Performance is Measured and Managed

Farming. In the Standard Grade Geography exam there are three types of farming you need to know about arable, livestock and mixed.

Summer 2014 Week 3 Tutorial Questions (Ch2) Solutions

Understanding Currency

Managerial Economics. 1 is the application of Economic theory to managerial practice.

The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice. What is Production?

SELECTING A COMPETENT FIRE RISK ASSESSOR

THE U.S. VERSUS EUROPEAN TRADEMARK REGISTRATION SYSTEMS: Could Either Learn From The Other? Cynthia C. Weber Sughrue Mion, PLLC

The Mathematics 11 Competency Test Percent Increase or Decrease

Land Acquisition and Development Finance Part IV

Types of Value LEARNING OBJECTIVES KEY TERMS INTRODUCTION

Make and register your lasting power of attorney a guide

Skills Knowledge Energy Time People and decide how to use themto accomplish your objectives.

Inventories: Cost Measurement and Flow Assumptions

It s all about managing food. Food Recall Plan Template For Food Manufacturers

Multiple Listing Service Gains $5.4 Million in Savings from Scalable Database Solution

Recording Transactions using. Financial Statement Approach

Presented by Sama Valentine (PhD finalist) Agricultural Engineering College of Business and Technology Catholic University Institute of Buea

CC343 Energy Efficiency in Food Processing

Abstract. Acknowledgments

CORN IS GROWN ON MORE ACRES OF IOWA LAND THAN ANY OTHER CROP.

ACM s analysis of the sustainability arrangements concerning the Chicken of Tomorrow

Quality and Quality Control

ESTIMATING GROSS MARGINS IN MEAT PACKING FOR BEEF, PORK, AND LAMB. Eric L. Sweatt, Derrell N. Peel, and Clement E. Ward *

Practice Set #7: Binomial option pricing & Delta hedging. What to do with this practice set?

Horse Meat Production in Canada

Chapter Five: Risk Management and Commodity Markets

Specifications of Futures and Options Contracts

How to make changes to your annuity income

Q IP6C no cop. 5

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

Understanding and Using Cattle Basis in Managing Price Risk

A HOW-TO GUIDE: UNDERSTANDING AND MEASURING INFLATION

Costs to Produce Hogs in IllinoisC2007

Poultry Broiler Farming

Agricultural Production and Research in Heilongjiang Province, China. Jiang Enchen. Professor, Department of Agricultural Engineering, Northeast

Basic Terminology For Understanding Grain Options, G A

TOC INDEX. Breakeven Analysis for Feeder Cattle. Alberta Agriculture Market Specialists. Introduction. Why Breakevens?

Speech at IFAC2014 BACKGROUND

Pig Farming 1. Introduction

How to Forecast Your Revenue and Sales A Step by Step Guide to Revenue and Sales Forecasting in a Small Business

Simulations, Games and Experiential Learning Techniques:, Volume 1,1974

Consumer Health and Safety

Deforestation in the Amazon

RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR FINANCING PROJECTS AND COMMERCIAL ACTIVITIES

Options on Beans For People Who Don t Know Beans About Options

Topic 4: Different approaches to GDP

Transcription:

130 THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION In conclusion, we may describe the present stage in the development of the carcass method of handling hogs in Canada as being one of steady expansion. The advantages weighed against the disadvantages, whether real or suggested, balance strongly in its favor. In so far as accurately appraising the market value of a hog, there is no com: parison with live grading. As to the possible field for extension work in making use of special qualities or of tracing out disease and weaknesses in order to eradicate and eliminate them, the machinery for identification is already provided. The standards employed are specially adaptable in connection with other swine improvement policies in both production and marketing and are thus being made to conform to the commercial requirements of the industry. DISCUSSION OF SELLING HOGS BASED ON DRESSING PERCENTAGE AND CARCASS GRADE W. O. FRASER United States Department of Agriculture Mr. Pearsall's discussion of the sale of hogs on the basis of carcass yield and grade, as such transactions are conducted in Canada, has been most interesting. Those of us who are interested in effectuating improvements in swine production and methods of marketing are intensely in, terested in the development of methods that will provide for the buying and selling of hogs on the basis of their actual value to the buyer. We believe this principle is fundamental to a constructive program for improvement in the production and marketing of swine. We are, therefore, entirely in sympathy with the objective that the system of marketing hogs on the basis of carcass yield and grade, as now practiced in Canada, was designed to accomplish. Such a system of selling hogs has the very decided advantages of, (1) providing for paying each farmer for the exact amount and grade of pork he produces which after all is the objective of the feeder in raising hogs, (2) it makes possible the positive identification of hogs that are soft and oily and the purchase of such hogs on the basis of their correct relative value, (3) it makes it possible to trace the origin of bruises and correct their source, and (4) it provides for determining the origin of diseased hogs and for correcting the cause that may have been responsible for the diseased condition.

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION 131 In considering ways and means of attaining the objective that has been reached in Canada by selling hogs on the basis of yield and carcass grade, or of effectuating changes in marketing that will proceed as far in that direction as is considered practical, there are, however, some considerations peculiar to the hog and pork trade of this country that should, I think, be given careful consideration. In considering the merits of selling hogs on the basis of carcass yield and grade some thought should be given to the complexities of the demand for hog products in this country by consumers who because of custom, relative purchasing power, and for other reasons, prefer and demand a wide variety of pork products. For example, New England prefers relatively heavy hams and thick heavy bacon; cuts that are produced from relatively heavy well-finished hogs. Baltimore, on the other hand, prefers pork carcasses that contain a relatively high percentage of lean meat, and cuts that are produced from light hogs that do not possess a high degree of finish. Other cities and areas have their respective preferences, which in combination with the relative supplies of hogs of the different weights and grades, establish the relative prices for hogs by weight, class and grade. As a result of these sectional preferences for hogs of different weights and degree of finish or grade and of the wide range in the weight and grade of the hogs marketed from year to year and from season to season due to available feed supplies, the existing hog-corn price ratio, and other factors, the relationship between the prices paid for hogs of different respective weights and grades is constantly undergoing change. For example, when heavy well-finished hogs are relatively scarce in relation to the demand, such hogs may command top prices. On the other hand, if feed supplies are plentiful and the supply of heavy wellfinished hogs is in excess of the demand, while the supply of light hogs that are somewhat lacking in finish is below trade requirements, light hogs of good grade and at times even medium grade may command a higher price per pound than choice heavy hogs. This complexity in our supply and demand situation merely means that we do not have an established standard hog that is consistently preferred in our trade. This situation is in sharp contrast to that existing in Canada where the export demand requires a specific type, weight and grade of hog, and nearly 50 per cent of the production is exported. If we had the opportunity to remove from the domestic hog trade, say 40 per cent or perhaps even 20 per cent, of the carcasses produced from hogs that weigh 180 to 220 pounds and that are of a specific degree of finish when

132 THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION marketed, then hogs of that weight and grade could be depended upon continuously to be in preference, thus immeasurably simplifying our standardization problem. It would seem, however, that it might be rather confusing if we were to establish rigid requirements for a grade of hogs and sell on that basis, when under conditions that are somewhat unusual with respect to supply and demand, hogs of either heavier weights and more finish or lighter weights and less finish, might command prices higher than those paid for the standard grade in our markets. This situation would, I believe, be quite confusing to producers inasmuch as they could not be assured that a hog that very closely approached the ideal with respect to weight and grade would necessarily command the top price. This problem is very closely related to the inconsistency that frequently exists between the actual cut-out value of hog carcasses and their weight and grade. In general, light, low grade hog carcasses yield a higher percentage of the relatively lean and high price cuts than do hogs that are heavier and of higher grade. In sections where a relatively large percentage of pork is sold fresh, these lower grade cuts frequently command prices that are as high if not even higher than those realized from the higher grades. Such a situation might result in hog carcasses of the good grade ha-ring a higher cut-out value than choice grade carcasses of similar weight, because of their higher yield of relatively lean cuts such as hams and loins, and their relatively lower yield of lard, in comparison with the choice grade. Consequently when as a result of unusual supply and demand conditions such a situation exists, good grade hog carcasses may command a higher price per pound than choice grade hog carcasses and even medium grade carcasses a higher price per pound than either good or choice. This does not mean, however, that cuts from the lower grade hog carcass will necessarily always bring a higher price per pound than those produced from the higher grades. The "grade of the cut relates fairly directly to the grade of the carcass and cuts produced from lower grade hog carcasses are not of sufficiently high quality always to command top prices. Nor does this mean that on a live grade basis good grade hogs should sell for a higher price per pound than choice hogs or medium grade hogs for a higher price per pound than good and choice hogs, even though the carcasses produced from the good grade hogs do grade good and sometimes bring a higher price per pound than the choice carcasses that are produced from choice hogs, and the medium grade carcasses that are produced from medium grade hogs a higher price per pound than either good or. the choice grades.

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION 133 The fact that on a live basis choice hogs sell for a higher price per pound than good grade hogs and good grade hogs for a higher price than medium grade hogs is due to the relative yield of the three grades. Other factors being equal, choice grade hogs yield a sufficiently higher percentage of carcass to live weight than good grade hogs and good grade hogs a sufficiently higher percentage of carcass to live weight than medium grade hogs to more than offset the price differential in favor of the lower grade carcasses. The prices paid for live hogs should, therefore, and under normal conditions do, relate directly to grade even though the carcasses produced from the same hogs that represent the choice, good and medium grades may relate inversely to grade. This situation would be very confusing to producers, if in offering their hogs for sale alive, the choice hog would sell for a higher price than the good, and the good a higher price than the medium, whereas if the hogs were slaughtered, and yields were not therefore a factor, the value of the carcass would relate directly to the cut-out value and might result in good grade carcasses selling for a higher price per pound than those that graded good or even choice. Such a situation is difficult to explain. It would be very difficult for hog producers correctly to evaluate in determining whether to sell their hogs on a live or carcass weight and grade basis. There are additional factors that should, I think, be carefully considered in connection with the sale of hogs on this basis. In a method of selling and distributing live hogs that is as complicated as ours, wherein hogs are assembled at country loading points either by dealers or shipping associations from which they are shipped directly to packing plants, or concentration yards, or to terminal markets where they may be reshipped to distant points for slaughter, it would seem to be necessary to work out a rather complicated method for making proper returns to producers. When we consider further that a load of hogs shipped to terminal markets may be sold to a number of different buyers because of the animal's suitability with respect to weight, class and grade for a particular purpose, the problem becomes further complicated. In such cases it would be necessary for someone or some agency to keep a record and make returns to the respective owners. Some further difficulty might arise in estimating yields in view of the various methods by which hogs may be handled. It would be difficult for farmers, for example, correctly to estimate yield if hogs were to be held over a day or two before slaughter or shipped to some distant point for slaughter, a consideration over which it would be very difficult for them

134 THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANIMAL PRODUCTION to maintain control if the hogs were once sold, although such action would materially influence the yield. It would seem to me that such a system of selling would be much more readily adaptable to selling hogs direct to packers rather than at terminal markets. Although we have no preference for one type of marketing as compared with another we do consider it desirable that producers be provided a maximum of flexibility in determining where and by what method their hogs should be sold. In closing may I say again that we are intensely interested in the adoption of such revisions in our methods of buying and selling hogs as are necessary to enable each producer to sell his hogs for their correct relative value. It is, however, our opinion that very material progress can be made toward that end without proceeding so far at this time as to resort to selling hogs on the basis of carcass yield and grade. Our experience indicates that hogs can be graded fairly accurately alive and that competent buyers can buy hogs alive at prices that will at least fairly accurately represent their correct relative value. As I have previously stated we are entirely in sympathy with the attainment of the objective that has been reached in Canada by means of selling hogs on the basis of carcass yield and grade. The further discussion of this topic should I think be directed toward just how far it is practical to go and what measure it is practical and feasible to adopt in our hog trade to accomplish that end.