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Sunbelt Ag News

Doane Closing Cotton Commentary

Peanut Harvest Starts In Georgia, South Carolina - Some Fields Ahead Of Schedule 9-02

DTN Livestock Close: Meat futures scored decent progress across the board 9-02

AFB Rice Close: Stopped The Downturn Of The Past Two Days And Ended Higher 9-02

Soybean Insects Still Piling Up In Southeast And Delta, Treatments Continue 9-02

AFB Cotton CLose: Blasted Through The Long Term Chart Resistance 9-02

AFB Grain-Soybean Close: Soybeans And Wheat Ended Higher 9-02

Panama Canal Authority And Mississippi State Port Authority Sign Partnership Agreement 9-02

DTN Cotton Close: Follow-through buying powers create new highs 9-02

DTN Grain Close: With a late push, corn and bean contracts joined wheat's high 9-02

Rice Yield Slump Continues, With Prospects For Lower Averages Possibly Ahead 9-02

DTN Livestock Midday: Futures rally 9-02

DTN Grain Midday: Light trade, wheat higher 9-02

Linn Corn: Lower yields, big demand push market higher 9-02

Linn Soybeans: Strong moves by corn and wheat not enough to boost soybeans 9-02

Virginia Cotton: Defoliation begins 9-02

Criminals see opportunity in...rice? Wall Street Journal Blog 9-02

DTN Grain Open: Grain contracts subdued overnight following corn and wheat rally 9-02

DTN Livestock Open: Set to open mixed 9-02

Keith Good Farm Policy: Ethanol v. Gasoline Prices; USDA and Roundup Ready Sugar Beets 9-02

Covering the Basis: The Wheat Market Situation 9-01

USDA Responds to Deregulation of Roundup Ready Sugar Beet Case 9-01

Diesel Price Update: Down Slightly 9-01

Cotton Pickers Start Rolling In Tennessee, Defoliation Going On A Wider Basis In The Midsouth 9-01

Cotton Picking Starts In Georgia, Defoliation Gaining Momentum In Southeast 9-01

Arkansas Cotton: Micronaire Defoliation Alert Issued On 2 Cotton Varieties 9-01

DTN MBAg by Adam Erwin: Non-Scientific Causes of Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS) in Soybeans 9-01

DTN Cotton Open: Wipes Out Modest Losses to Trade Ahead 9-01

Creditors of bankrupt Verasun demand farmers pay up or get sued 8-31

Arkansas and South Dakota farmers compare who had a dryer summer, SD wins 8-31

When No-till Continuous Corn Doesn't Work, Try Vertical Tillage 8-31

Texas and New Mexico: Peanut Field Day on Sept. 8 near Brownfield 8-31

Georgia Cotton And Peanut Field Day Set For September 8 In Tifton 8-31

U.S. Rice Sale to Iraq Confirmed 8-30

Did August Weather Reduce Corn Yield Potential? 8-30

Louisiana Wheat Acreage Expected To Increase 8-30

Manufacturers Unveil Tillage Tools 8-30

NASS Field Surveys Under Way 8-30

Fertilizer prices are staying firm on tight supply 8-30

Soybean Rust: North Carolina Reports Its First Find Of 2010 8-30

Virginia: Tidewater Late-Season Field Crops tour, September 14 8-27

Friday, July 30, 2010

Mississippi Livestock Producers Having A Tough Time

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Today’s economy means people are eating out and purchasing meat products less often, but cattle and hog producers have learned to make the most of tough times.

   

Livestock producers reduce their cattle herd sizes and hog numbers to reduce the amount of meat on the market and bolster the product prices, which remain at the mercy of the economy.

 

   

 John Michael Riley, a Mississippi State University Extension Service agricultural economist, said producers work hard to keep their product affordable when money is tight.

 

   

“Cattle supplies are down considerably nationwide. Herds are shrinking; the number of cattle on feed is down,” he said. “There is less product available, which is good, but demand is also down because of the economy.”

 

   

 Riley said hog markets are facing similar challenges with supply and demand.
   

“Hogs are not down as much as cattle. Pork production is expected to be flat through 2011, whereas cattle will be down,” Riley said. “Regarding livestock feed costs, corn has been on a rollercoaster depending on demand from China and the weather. Because the weather looks good now, feed costs are coming down.”

 

   

 Extension beef cattle specialist Jane Parish said Mississippi cattle have managed to buck the national downward trend. 
     

“While the rest of the country was going down, Mississippi cattle inventory actually went up slightly,” she said. “One reason could be the good reputation of our cattle. Mississippi and Southeastern cattle are outperforming cattle from other parts of the country in terms of carcass quality, health and overall performance.”

 

   

Despite challenges, Mississippi’s weather conditions in recent years have been better for feed production than the weather in some cattle-producing states. Land prices are also favorable for livestock production.

 

   

Mississippi’s cattle numbers have increased to almost 1 million, but the number of producers has decreased, which means the state has more cattle per farm.

 

   

“About seven or eight years ago, we had about 25,000 producers; now we are under 21,000,” she said. “We have new cattle producers, but we are losing producers faster than we are adding.”

 

   

Extension swine specialist Mark Crenshaw said hog markets just improved to breakeven prices in the spring, unlike the previous 18 months. He credits slightly increased demand and lower feed costs.

 

   

“Mississippi’s hog industry is still in the process of restructuring from the closure of Bryan Foods in West Point in 2007,” Crenshaw said. “Some producers, like Prestige Farms, are shipping to the mid-West, and some farms have closed. Other independent producers have scaled back and tried to align themselves with local markets and custom slaughter houses.”

 

   

Crenshaw said the specialty markets appeal to people who want to buy locally.
 

“This is a growing trend that will escalate when the economy improves,” he said. “Producers need to develop their consumer base. It takes time to develop a branded product.”


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Upcoming Events:

(FD: field day; SS: scout schools)

Texas and New Mexico Peanut Field Day, Sept. 8, 5 to 8 p.m. Delwin Marrow Barn near Brownfield

Georgia Cotton And Peanut Field Day, Tifton, September 8, 9 a.m.

Tennessee Cotton Field Day, September 8, Jackson, W. Tenn. REC

Virginia: Late-Season Field Crops Tour, Sept. 14, Virginia Tech Tidewater REC, Suffolk

Georgia Peanut Tour, September 14-16, More Information Inside (701)

West Texas Deer Research Group meeting,September 16-17 at Kingsville

California Almond Industry Conference, December 7-9, Modesto

Mississippi: 2010 USA Rice Outlook Conference, Dec. 8-10, Biloxi 8-11