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December 20, 2012
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Montana salebarn

Beef Cow Slaughter Continues
at Liquidation Pace

With only a few weeks of data to finish the year, beef cow slaughter, though significantly smaller than last year, is on pace to ensure additional herd liquidation for the 2012 year. For the year to date, beef cow slaughter is down 12.6% from last year. Smaller year-over-year reductions in recent weeks have reduced the magnitude of the decrease from last year.

In fact, one interpretation of smaller year-over-year decreases the last few weeks could be seen as an indication that liquidation is increasing with growing slaughter rates relative to a year ago. However, by this time last year, most of the drought-forced liquidation was past and beef cow slaughter had dropped back to more seasonally typical levels. In other words, weekly beef cow slaughter has dropped back to single-digit decreases from last year after spending much of the year with double-digit decreases, but it really says more about what was happening last year than this year.

At the current pace, 2012 beef cow slaughter will be more than 11% of the Jan. 1 cow herd inventory. This will make the fifth consecutive year of double-digit beef culling rates. The average annual beef cow culling rate is 9.6%. In previous liquidation phases, beef cow culling has increased more than 10% per year for only one or two years.

Five years in a row of double-digit beef culling has never happened since beef cow slaughter data became available in 1986. The liquidation in 2012 is less than 2011, and the beef herd is expected to be down roughly 1.6% on Jan. 1, 2013.

In order to halt the persistent beef cow liquidation, beef cow slaughter will need to drop by 13% or more, year over year, for each of the next two years. Beef cow culling rates usually drop to less than 9% for two to four years during herd expansions. The drought will determine whether that process can begin in 2013.

Persistent extreme-drought conditions are setting up another round of significant herd liquidation if conditions do not improve. In Oklahoma and similar regions that rely on stock ponds for livestock water, the lack of water is the most critical factor in the next two to three months. We have already seen many calves marketed this fall with dried mud to the knees on the front legs, indicating that they have been utilizing the last available water before being forced to market.

Some cows will be liquidated through the winter for lack of water and many more will move promptly next spring if the current dry conditions persist. In the Southern Plains, if the current dry winter is followed by a dry spring, 2013 will be a repeat of the massive liquidations of 2011, except that it will happen earlier with more sales before July 4 compared to after, like 2011.

Editor’s Note: Derrell Peel is a livestock marketing specialist for Oklahoma State University Extension.



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