Lou Moore forecasts UNIVERSITY PARK - The red meat industry is inturmoil. Most producers ot ted cattle and hogs have operated without profit tor 2 years. Packers are closing, or merging in order to stay in business. Pennsylvania has lost 3 major plants in recent weeks—a beef slaughterer, a hog slaughterer, and a leading ham producer. Many consumers, caught in an economic squeeze, have less in come and spend less ot it for red meat. The stage is set for major ad justments m the red-meat in dustry. lowa Beef Merger lowa Beef Processors, the nations’ leading beef packer and trend setter in boxed beef, has agreed in principal to merge with Occidental Petroleum. Acquisition of IBP will cost Occidental about $BOB million—not a bad price for a meat company that has been in business for only about 20 years. Both firms claim the merger will be good for them. lowa Beef says that the tremendous financial backing available through Oc cidental Petroleum will enable it to move into the pork business and expand export markets quicker than originally planned. Oc cidental says they want to be firmly entrenched in the food business by 1990, because it thinks food in the 1990 s will be as critical as energy has become in the 1980 s. This is just another step which mcreases concentration in meat packing and processing. By the late 1960 s a total of only tour Farmer Boy Comes Through Again •. . TRUCKLOAD SALE WOVEN WIRE FLOORING 5 GAUGE GALVANIZED HIGH CARBON TOP QUALITY STEEL ...| M AWC MYERSTOWN. PA 17067 Call 717-866-7565 For An Appointment or Stop By Our Office. Our Trained A 57 c. MAIN AVt.r IVIT CIWIVU ' Staff Will Do Their Best To Assist You With Layout And Design. 1/2 Mile East of Myerstown packers were buying about halt the ted cattle in the leading feeding states. Today, the tour leading buyers account tor more than 65 percent of ted cattle purchases. Except tor these four leading firms, beef packers have been on the defensive. In fact, an estimated 40 percent have closed their doors since 1969. is it true that the future belongs only to the Occidentals, Cargills, General Foods, and Continental Grains? Fed cattle tut $7O - again During the second week of June, a -few fed cattle at local markets sold for more than $7O per hun dredweight—the first the $7O level had been exceeded since last November. Prices have advanced more thou $lO per hundredweight suice eaiiy April. Beef production increased 6 percent in the first quarter of this year, but has declined 'about 2 percent during the current quarter. Most of the increase was attributed to heavier* weight animals. Further price increases for ted cattle are expected this summer, despite the reluctance of con sumers to become eager buyers of beet. The late-spring retail price of beet of about $2.36 averaged about a dollar a pound above pork. Such a difference in price drives con sumers to pork and poultry. Mid-summer cattle prices should reach at least the mid-$7O range. While this is welcome news to producers, it’s not much to cheer about. Today a cattle feeder needs a price of about $75 per hun- SPECIAL *2 10 CASH & CARRY Complete sales, service and installation of: Gestation, Farrowing, Nursery Grower and Finishing Systems M Swine Confinement Systems RMER BOY Best in Design, Price and Experience rapid changes a troubled livestock in dredweight just to cover his costs. But after 2 years of losses (in some months almost fl 3 per hun dredweight), many feeders will smile as the break-even price approaches. Will the current recovery be sufficient to encourage an ex pansion in cattle feeding t Pressure off feed prices A slowdown m gram exports and less corn used by domestic livestock producers should insure comfortable carryovers rather than critical supply binds, as earlier feared. A record winter wheat crop is near harvest. Corn planting has slowed m some leading states because of rainfall, but the rams should help bring a big crop. We have, in desperation, offered the Russians up to six million tons of gram before September 30th. They are, at least to date, ignoring our offer while signing long-term agreements with Argentina and Canada. We may have become a supplier of “last resort” to the Soviet Union. Our livestock industry should welcome larger gram supplies and somewhat lower prices; lower gram prices would decrease the breakeven price for beet and hog producers. Hog prices improve Slaughter supplies ot hogs have been dropping in recent weeks, causing prices to move con sistently higher. Prices are ex pected to exceed $5O during the second halt ot 1981. Even though the price is up sharply in recent weeks, there is no SQUARE FOOT profit m the business. The break even price for efficient producers is about ?53 per hundred. But the June pig crop report BRATTLEBORO, Vt. - Smce January, 13 A.I. studs have volunteered 75 of their young holstem bulls for a random blood typing program, still in the research stages. The National Association of. Animal Breeders (NAAB) and the Holstein Association have established the .project in order to improve identification m cattle m DHI tests. “We have a program designed to evaluate the accuracy of iden tification of bulls entering active A.i. service,” explained Richard Nelson, spokesman for the Holstein Association. The Holstein Association will select four daughters at random per sire to be bloodtyped with their respective dams, it available. The daughters are a propor tionate share of grade and registered animals from the USDA report with records that con tributed to the bull’s proof. “The proof of most bulls," said Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 18,1981—A17 industry Sire ID checked with blood test me. .•Am/, indicates production cuts will continue. The December-May pig crop was down 9 percent and producers have 12 percent fewer breeding animals on farms. Nelson, “is based on more grades than registered.” William Durfey, Executive Vice President of the NAAB explained that bloodtyping can and has been applied m practical breeding situations. Because cattle have a great number of blood types, the com plexity of their blood groups maximize the chance the right sire will be identified. “But, there is always the possibility that more than one bull would qualify as a sire,” said Durfey. The blood typing project will help identify how much misidentification may be oc curring and what can be done to improve any problem areas. As a result of the project, the researchers may find out just how accurately dairy fanners keep records, explained Nelson. Meanwhile, encouraging dairy farmers to keep accurate records and calving dates is an on-going process, Nelson concluded.