By George Jared
Cattle farmers enjoyed record prices in 2024, but still had to contend with disease and rising input costs that cut into profit margins.
The average for feeders more than 500 pounds was 18.6% throughout the year, while the price for an 800-pound steer topped $264.64 cwt, a 14.7% yearly increase, according to Drovers.
Those prices are higher than the all-time highs set in 2015. The higher prices, which leads to increased prices for consumers in the grocery store, might be around for a while. Drovers reported that inventories are still down and producers are not replenishing their herds.
How long the prices will stay up and if they’ve peaked are questions many industry stakeholders continue to grapple with. Despite the price surge, profits remain lower than expected.
“What we all know in the cattle industry is that prices are up. When those prices will peak is still a big question,” said Maggie Justice, beef cattle extension specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. “But prices are high, so when weather started to get hard on us this year, guys started selling again. Because although prices are high, we’re still not seeing the profit margins you’d think we’d see.”
Justice said input costs, paired with some less-than-ideal conditions have left many producers not retaining heifers in their herds.
“With still high input costs, we’re still seeing a big pool of heifers into the feed yards and guys aren’t purchasing heifers to raise and put back into our national herd, so our national herd numbers are still going down,” Justice said. “If we see a high number of heifers in the feed yards, the national herd won’t grow. Because we would have to retain those heifers, grow them so they can keep having calves.”
High input costs aren’t the only thing holding cattle producers back. Jonathan Kubesch, extension forage specialist for the Division of Agriculture, said that wet and dry weather impacted hay quality this year.
“Because it was wet for a lot of folks, we had a delayed first cut and so we had over-mature grasses,” said Kubesch. “We had a really good second cut, but for those of us in the fall drought, we didn’t have a third cut.”
While some portions of the state faced conditions too wet to cut, other areas struggled with drought, and heavy armyworm infestations were felt statewide.
“In general, I would say statewide we were at 80% of our production potential, but in our really drought affected areas we lost maybe half or more of our production,” said Kubesch. “We had a lot of armyworm pressure dry spell and we were offset on our hay cut schedule.”
Cattle producers also felt the impacts of multiple regulatory changes to the industry in 2024, with the biggest change being the availability of over-the-counter antibiotics. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued guidance requiring drug manufacturers to change labels on animal antibiotics to require a veterinary prescription. This guidance went into effect in June of 2023.
“This year we finally started to see the full impact of the FDA’s regulation on antibiotics,” said Justice. “Although it went into effect last year, anything that was on store shelves could still be sold. So really this year is when you saw people going to the store and it wasn’t there anymore.”
Justice said while the regulation will help prevent antibiotic overuse, the shortage of large animal and rural veterinarians in the state will be problematic for producers that do not have an established relationship with a veterinarian.
Multiple insects have also been a concern for Arkansas cattle producers this year such as the Asian longhorned tick, known to transmit a protozoan parasite called Theileria orientalis which is deadly for cattle.
“We had our first confirmed death caused by Theileria in June of this year. We confirmed Asian longhorned tick presence in the state prior to this, but this was our first known death,” said Justice. “Although this is scary, the good news is now we know it’s here and we can test for it.”
Justice said because Theileria mimics anaplasmosis, a common disease in Arkansas cattle, awareness and testing will make a huge difference in cattle health.
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