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Last Week’s Responses— 3/17

DAILY MARKET SUMMARY

Monday, March 23

AUCTION SUMMARY

Herreid Livestock

3,150 Herreid, SD

Friday

Feeder Steers - Medium & Large #1 Feeder Heifers - Medium & Large #1
500-600 lbs470.00-531.00500-600 lbs455.00-475.00
600-700 lbs426.00-445.00600-700 lbs397.00-425.00
700-800 lbs372.50-414.00700-800 lbs348.00-381.00
800-900 lbs341.00-367.00800-900 lbs-
900-1000 lbs323.00-340.50 900-1000 lbs311.00

Dunlap Livestock

1,122 Dunlap, IA

Friday

Feeder Steers - Medium & Large #1 Feeder Heifers - Medium & Large #1
400-500 lbs484.00-609.00300-400 lbs517.00-549.00
500-600 lbs461.00-521.00400-500 lbs456.00-531.00
600-700 lbs395.00-436.00500-600 lbs420.00-456.00
700-800 lbs371.00-414.00600-700 lbs371.50-419.50
800-900 lbs347.00-374.00700-800 lbs343.50-368.00

Lexington Livestock

971 Lexington, NE

Friday

Feeder Steers - Medium & Large #1 Feeder Heifers - Medium & Large #1
500-600 lbs455.00400-500 lbs-
600-700 lbs413.50-445.00500-600 lbs415.00-465.00
700-800 lbs374.00-385.00600-700 lbs370.50-416.00
800-900 lbs348.00-349.75700-800 lbs339.00-373.50
900-1000 lbs325.00-341.50800-900 lbs316.00-322.50

CHICAGO MERCANTILE EXCHANGE LIVESTOCK FUTURES SETTLEMENT

Monday

Live Cattle Change  Feeder Cattle Change
Apr 235.300 1.250 Mar 358.450 0.700
Jun 234.650 1.225 Apr 352.475 1.300
Aug 231.750 0.925 May 348.350 1.975

CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE GRAIN FUTURES SETTLEMENTS

Monday

Corn Change  Soy Beans Change
May 4.5950 0.0600 May 11.6350 0.0225
Jul 4.7050 0.0550 Jul 11.7900 0.0250
Sep 4.7250 0.0550 Aug 11.7300 0.0300

KANSAS CITY BOARD OF TRADE

Monday

  Wheat Change
May 6.0325 0.0300
Jul 6.1825 0.0300
Sep 6.3275 0.0300

ESTIMATED DAILY CATTLE SLAUGHTER

Monday 105,000 Friday
Week Ago (est)98,000 Steer & Heifer: 57,000
Year Ago (act)118,000 Cow & Bull: 19,000
Wk To Date (est)105,000 Saturday
Last Week (est)98,000 Steer & Heifer: 12,000
Last Year (est)118,000Cow & Bull: 1,000

Monday, March 23

5 AREA WEEKLY ACCUMULATED WEIGHTED AVG CATTLE PRICE

As of 10:00 amHead CountAvg WeightAvg Price
Live Steer 14,043 1,590 235.08
Live Heifer 8,889 1,416 235.07
Dressed Steer 7,856 1,030 372.15
Dressed Heifer 1,655 895 371.97

DAILY ESTIMATED CUTOUT VALUES

600-900#ChoiceSelectChoice/Select Spread
Current Cutout Values: 399.13 393.83 5.30
Change from prior day: -0.98 +0.89  

DAILY CATTLE SLAUGHTER

Monday 105,000 Friday
Week Ago (est)98,000 Steer & Heifer: 57,000
Year Ago (act)117,638 Cow & Bull: 19,000
Wk To Date (est)105,000 Saturday
Last Week (est)98,000 Steer & Heifer: 12,000
Last Year (est)117,638 Cow & Bull: 1,000
COMMODITIES

WEEKLY COMMODITY BUZZ – 3/21/2026

Fed rate pause while markets await direction from crude oil

Howdy market watchers!

Spring has sprung and it feels like summer! It has been one of the wildest weather March’s in recent memory with snow flurries and freezing temps to start the week only to be followed by highs in the mid-90s to finish the week. The transition between seasons can always bring volatility, but this year has been particularly so.

The ‘excursion’ in Iran is entering its fourth week and while political rhetoric from both the US and Israel suggests it is just about over, new threats emerge from the crippled Iranian regime. While such threats may indeed be empty, they warrant heeding with a military style ruling group that is literally fighting for their existence. Continued attacks on neighboring Middle East countries have caused greater unity in the cause of much of the region against the Iranian regime.

A major attack on a natural gas facility in Qatar this week, which represents four percent of global production and is said to potentially take 5 years to repair, brought about enhanced uncertainty for fertilizer production from the region and escalating global nitrogen prices, in particular. European natural gas prices have surged given its import dependence, but US natural gas prices have actually tamed with ample inventory from warmer temperatures and slow exports putting downward pressure on US prices.

And yet, US fertilizer prices continue to push higher. While natural gas is used globally, it is traded much less as a global commodity given the export markets are more fragmented than other oil, for example. This presents a huge opportunity for the US to become a much more meaningful exporter of natural gas to take advantage of the large price arbitrage to Europe especially, but only recently have US natural gas exports been emphasized and invested in and so it takes time to get export terminals to the scale that would impact domestic US prices.

There is probably more agreement in the US and around the world for eliminating the Iranian threat, but for now, it is owned by Presidents’ Trump and Israel’s Netanyahu. There is an inordinate level of political division in the US at the present time, which makes the upcoming mid-term elections all the more of a fight. Our allies know this as do our enemies and so the global chess match continues to play out. There is much worthy to fight for, but such uncertainty in the medium term is not welcome news by markets.

We’ve seen greater volatility enter the markets that can ignore fundamentals. Its been a tough four weeks for the equity markets, precious metals and somewhat for the cattle markets with increasing uncertainty from the launch of attacks on Iran. As I wrote last week, the crude oil market holds the key to the rest as it is the front-line barometer of the extent this conflict could escalate and cause broader global turmoil. The fact that WTI crude oil has managed to remain below $100 per barrel has been surprising, but this is not over yet despite many attempts to reassure and reopen the key, global trade artery. It seems every Friday we close strong as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and represents 20 percent of global oil flows.

The crude-led rally in grains seemed to unwind a bit on Friday as wheat and corn weakened despite crude’s late session rally. I believe some of this was end-of-week profit taking that we’ve seen throughout the week followed by strong rebounds. There is talk of rains for Oklahoma and Texas wheat areas in the 10-day forecast, but there is a lot of heat between now and then and I believe it could be more east than needed for the main part of the wheat belt. There is also talk of another freeze at the end of March, which would be a market mover. Russia's SovECON also raised its forecast of this year's wheat harvest by nearly 2.0 million metric tons to 87.6 MMT versus USDA's estimated 89.5 MMT.

Key I-state corn areas remain dry ahead of planting. I’m sure the USDA is working to factor in all of these many items ahead of the release of the critical March 31st Planting Intentions Report. It is sure to be a market mover as it usually is.

Corn exports have continued to be strong and soybeans were this week while wheat was at the bottom of expectations. US NOPA soybean crush reports this week showed phenomenal domestic demand for soybeans, which comes at a pivotal time with China purchase commitments questionable after President Trump this week delayed his end of the month trip to Beijing.

The US dollar has been stubbornly elevated in recent weeks with the ongoing conflict. The Federal Reserve’s FOMC held rates steady this week given inflation concerns with more tongue-in-cheek comments of the word ‘transitory’ for the recent energy hike flowing through to the economy. The US Producer Price Index released this week measuring wholesale prices for February rose 0.7 percent versus 0.3 percent expected. Inflation in wholesale prices will begin to factor through to consumer price inflation in time and can cause demand issues especially with higher gas prices tightening monthly budgets.

Much depends on the price of oil and more importantly, the ‘duration’ of higher prices. If oil prices stay steady and begin to weaken, I think the markets could ‘absorb’ the risks from these ongoing tensions and get back to regular business. The opposite scenario of elevated energy prices for longer begins to concern me for the broader economy as well as the cattle market indirectly through consumers.

In the cattle markets, it does indeed seem that the JBS Greeley packing facility strike that officially began on Monday was already priced into the market. In fact, with all that is going on in the world and with the US equity market, cattle have held up relatively well. Fed cattle cash trade returned this week with large numbers, but still at the $235 level. However, it was not lower as we’ve seen in recent weeks, but we are looking for higher trade before calling this a bottom.

Sale barns continue to be on fire, especially for light weight calves for grass. The money being spent on cattle right now embeds optimism that prices are going higher, but also absolute fear of the amount of dollars on the table if it doesn’t. There are calves being purchased that cannot be protected at breakeven levels even if you choose the highest LRP or at-the-money put option. Frankly, I don’t like spending risk management money if you cannot protect at least a breakeven. Now, those could be famous last words I know, but markets will fluctuate.

However, if you’re buying at a level where breakevens cannot be protected, but then it can in a couple weeks if we extend this rally, be judicious and don’t watch it come and go. Do something at least on a portion of your total exposure. If you believe markets are going to go higher, you can always start with 10 percent or 20 percent and then continue to add or roll up protection if and when the market rallies further. However, if it doesn’t due to an unexpected, Black Swan event or headline or political rhetoric, which is absolutely possible in today’s environment, you will have some protection.

Today’s markets are different than when I started. Profit opportunities come and then immediately disappear, it seems. It is not fair and mostly, not justified given fundamentals, but it is how the markets work. As they say, “a bird in hand is better than two in the bush” and that seems truer these days than ever before.

USDA’s monthly Cattle on Feed report was released at 2 PM on Friday. March 1st on-feed numbers came in at 99.8 percent of last year versus 99.3 percent expected by the trade and so above expectations. Placements for February were reported at 103.7 percent versus 100.2 percent expected, which was noticeably higher than anticipated. However, marketings in February were higher than expected at 93.2 percent versus 92.6 percent expected by the analysts. While placements and total on-feed were both higher than expected, the return of fed cattle cash trade and spring and summer demand ahead could shift the market focus on the uptick in sales.

Fed cattle cash trade topped out at $236 in Kansas on Friday while $235 traded in Texas, Colorado and Nebraska. I believe we could see higher cash trade next week after this week’s steady pricing versus last week.

Much attention will be paid to headlines out of the Middle East this weekend and the impact on crude oil prices and the spillover to stocks and cattle. Futures had a decent week with all contracts holding above the respective 9-day moving averages and several closings at the 20-day moving average.

If you’re ready to trade commodity markets, give me a call at (580) 232-2272 or stop by my office to get your account set up and discuss risk management and marketing solutions to pursue your objectives. Self-trading accounts are also available. It is never too late to start and there is no operation too small to get a risk management and marketing plan in place.

Wishing everyone a successful trading week! Let us know if you'd like to join our daily market price and commentary text messages to stay informed!

Brady Sidwell is a Series 3 Licensed Commodity Futures Broker and Principal of Sidwell Strategies. He can be reached at (580) 232-2272 or at [email protected]. Futures and Options trading involves the risk of loss and may not be suitable for all investors. Review full disclaimer at https://www.sidwellstrategies.com/fccp-disclaimer-21951.

ASK JOHN

John is back on the podcast to break down what’s happening in the cattle market and some of the bigger stories developing across the industry right now. John shares updates from the sale barns and what he’s seeing in terms of demand, pricing, and early signs of producers adjusting due to dry conditions. The conversation also covers the latest on the JBS Greeley plant shutdown, ongoing wildfire devastation in Nebraska, and a new bill being introduced that could have major implications for packers and the structure of the beef industry moving forward.

Takeaways:

  • Cattle markets remained mostly steady this week with continued strong demand

  • Light cattle markets are holding strong despite some variability in quality and volume

  • Dry conditions and lack of water are beginning to impact producer decision-making, especially in the West

  • Some producers are starting to sell replacement heifers early due to drought concerns

  • The JBS Greeley plant shutdown continues to shift cattle to other processing facilities

  • Some cattle are still being processed at Greeley, with signs the situation may evolve

  • Nebraska wildfires have burned hundreds of thousands of acres and impacted tens of thousands of cattle

  • Relief efforts are underway, and producers are being encouraged to support affected ranchers

  • A new bill introduced in Congress aims to address packer concentration and increase competition

  • The proposed legislation could significantly change packer structure, vertical integration, and market dynamics

Donation Information:

Nebraska Cattlemen Disaster Relief Fund

Make checks payable to: Nebraska Cattlemen | Memo: “Disaster Relief Fund”

Mail to: 4611 Cattle Drive, Lincoln, NE 68521-4309

Nebraska Sandhills Rancher Fire Relief

Make checks payable to: Kearney Area Community Foundation | Memo: “Sandhills Rancher Fire Relief Fund”

Mail to: PO Box 291, Oshkosh, NE, 69154

Have a topic you want to hear discussed? Use the button below to send us your request and tune in to CattleUSA TV on YouTube to see the answer 🤠

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Monday, March 23

Protecting Yearling Cattle in Today's Market

📅 Thursday, March 26 | 11:00 - 11:30 AM CST

Join us for a quick 30‑minute webinar on the feeder cattle outlook and how Livestock Risk Protection (LRP) can help you protect margins on summer and fall yearlings.

We’ll cover the basics of LRP, how it compares with put options and ways producers are using trading strategies to strengthen their marketing plans.

You'll learn:

✔ Key trends shaping the feeder cattle market

✔ How LRP helps protect yearling prices

✔ How LRP compares with puts

✔ Practical ways to add LRP to your marketing plan

Save your spot and strengthen your risk management approach.

CattleUSA Insurance Partner Logic Ag Marketing Commentary

I didn't have the last week, or today for that matter, on my bingo card. If you look at last week's cattle on feed, showing we placed more than we marketed, combined with the market still trading the Iran conflict's volatility, I thought we'd be a touch lower today. If you cut out the noise and take a blind look, I'd come to the opinion cattle futures are trading the same directions as equities. That being said, Trump's comment early this morning probably had a big part in driving equities higher, while grains and oil sold off some today.

If we bring it back to the cash market, Friday's late trade would be considered $2-$3 higher, but last week's 5-Area weekly average settled up a buck. So we changed that trend and we still didn't hit huge volume. Combine that with higher slaughter rates, I'd like to hope we can hold that higher cash trend this week. Maybe I'm nervous about the contracted cattle slowing that down, but if we keep the packers profitable, maybe we burn through those faster than we did in March. If we don't see stocks fall out of bed there's some things going for us this week.

-Fat cattle kill at 105,000 vs 98,000 a week ago and 117,000 a year ago

-Choice boxes down .98 to $399.13 and select up .89 to $393.83 for a spread of 5.30 on 73 loads

-CME feeder index(Feeder LRP Settlement) for 3/20 came in at $361.33

-Fed Cattle LRP’s ending last week settled at $235.09

-Hog kill at 492,000 vs 393,000 a week ago and 471,000 a year ago.

-Afternoon Pork reported up .40 at $99.60 on 299.19 loads

-CME lean hog index on 3/19 reported at 91.95

-CME pork cutout index on 3/20 reported at 99.18

-LRP’s ending 3/23 settled at approximately $91.77

Dan Gerhold

Click here to connect with a CattleUSA Insurance representative

Trading futures and options involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Review our full disclaimer at https://www.logicag.com/disclaimer

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