Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 25, 2003, Image 20

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    A2O-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 25, 2003
Northeast Broiler
Fryer Parts
Part II
ATLANTA, GA.
October 22,2003
Report Supplied By USD A
Trucklot buying activity was about fair
during midweek trading as dealers
limited orders to normal committments.
Offerings of breast items were at least suf
ficient. Legs and leg quarters were gener
ally adequate. Wings were clearing well.
Tenderloins were available. Retail and
distributive movement was mostly fair
with best draw centering around scattered
features. The market tone was barely
steady on tenderloins and about steady on
the balance.
ICE PACKED BROILER/FRYER
PARTS, DELIVERED TO FIRST RE
CEIVERS IN POOL TRUCKLOT AND
TRUCKLOT QUANTITIES, CENTS
PER POUND. ITEM CURRENT NE
GOTIATED TRADING BREAST - B/S
155-160 TENDERLOINS 145-150
BREAST - WITH RIBS 76-77 BREAST -
LINE RUN 76 LEGS 38-39 LEG QUAR
TERS (BULK) 29-30 DRUMSTICKS
34-35 THIGHS 29-30 B/S THIGHS 84-85
WINGS (WHOLE) 80-81 BACKS AND
NECKS (STRIPPED) 10-12 LIVERS (5
POUND TUBS) 35-40 GIZZARDS
(HEARTS) 55-60
INCLUDES NEW YORK CITY MET
ROPOLITAN AREA, NORTHERN
NEW JERSEY, MASSACHUSETTS,
CONNECTICUT, RHODE ISLAND,
AND PENNSYLVANIA (NORTHEAST
OF HARRISBURG).
Dally National
Grain Market
Summary
St. Joseph, MO
October 22,2003
Report Supplied By USDA
Daily National Grain Market Summary
Grain and soybean bids were moderate to sharply higher today.
Wheat bids were up due to technical and fund buying. In the winter
wheat areas crop concerns are growing due to the lack of moisture.
Com was supported by good overnight exports, along with technical
buying Soybeans also rallied on the good overnight export news and
tight U S supply Wheat was 10-15 cents higher with Portland 6-8
cents higher. Com was 3-7 cents higher. Sorghum was 8-17 cents
higher. Soybeans were 18-25 cents higher except Minneapolis 17 cents
higher
EXPORT SALES. PURCHASER COMMODITY TONNAGE DE
LIVERY DATE
Unknown to Japan Com 231,648 2003/04 Marketing Year Un
known to Egypt Com 100,000 2003/04 Marketing Year Unknown to
China Soybeans 454,000 2003/04 Marketing Year South Korea Soy
beans 50,000 Dec 20-Jan 9
Total Com 331,648 tonnes. Soybeans 504,000 tonnes.
TRUCK BIDS 10/22/03 10/21/03 10/23/02 Wheat: Kansas City
(HRW ORD) 3 54-3.59 up 13 4.82 Minneapolis (DNS) 3.95 up 15 Vi
4.97 Vi Portland (SWW) 3 70-3 73 up 6-8 4.62-4.65 St. Louis (SRW)
3.35-3 50 up 10-144 06
Corn, US No 2 Yellow Kansas City 2.10-2.15 up 4 2.50-2 51 Min
neapolis 2.05 V* up 3 Vi 2 35 Vi So. lowa 2.11-2 13 Vi up 4 Vi-5 Vi
2 39-2 40 Omaha 2 07-2 08 up 5 2 40 Soybeans, US No 1 Yellow.
Kansas City 7 46 up 21 5 57-5 60 Minneapolis 7 31 V* up 17 '/: 5 42 Vi
So lowa 7 31-7 35 up 18-20 5 43-5 44 Cent II Processor 742 '/4-7.6S
V* up 24 */-25 Vi 549 '/>-5 54 Vi Minneapolis truck -to arme 20 days
FUTURES Kansas City (Dec) Wheat 3 54 % up 13 Vi 4 62 Minne
apolis (Dec) Wheat 3 65 up 10 'a 4 77 1/1 Chicago (Dec) Wheat 3 54 '/*
up 14 396 l / 1 Chicago (Dec! Corn 220 'A up 4 '/• 250 V 4 Chicago
(Nm) Soybeans 750'/up 20 554 '/ EXPORT BIDS Barge bids
out of the Port of New Orleans, or Rail out of the North Texas Gull
Bids per bushel, except sorghum per cwt
US I HRW Wheat, Ord Protein Rail 404 1 -4 09 '2 up 14
5 08-5 10 US 2 Soft Red Winter Wheat Barge 394 1 -3 96 up 14
441 1 US 2 Y ellow C orn Barge 262 \*-2 62 1 1 up 6 1 -7 278 * 4-2 79
'4 US 2 Yellow Sorghum Rail 4 74-4 92 up 8-!7 5 18 Barge 4 92-5 04
up 9-12 s 54 US 2 Yellow Soybeans Barge 7 87 /-i-7 88 U up 21
5 87-5 87 ’
Oklahoma Feeder
Cattle Weekly
Oklahoma City, OK
October 22,2003
Report Supplied By USDA
OKLAHOMA NATIONAL STOCKYARDS. Weekly Cattle Sum
mary Compared to last week. Feeder cattle and calves 2.00-7.00
lower. Demand moderate for calves and feeders. General consensus
of trade members is that cattle prices have peaked at the record levels
set last week. Last Friday’s Cattle-On-Feed report surprised some
with 25% of placements over 800 lbs.
Receipts this week 13,350; last week 12,066; last year 11,373. Sup
ply consisted of 44% yearlings and calves over 600 lbs; 50% calves;
6% cows and bulls. Heifers comprised 42% of feeder & calf supply.
Prices follow with weighted average weight and price in parenlhe-
FEEDER STEERS: Medium and Large 1: CALVES; 300-375 lbs
(350 lbs) 127.00-136.00 (130.11); 400-450 lbs (417 lbs) 116.00-127.50
(124 51), 450-500 lbs (475 lbs) 108.50-120.25 (114.71), 500-550 lbs (525
lbs) 100.00-112.00 (105 75), 550-600 lbs (575 lbs) 95.00-107.50
(100 83), 600-650 lbs (619 lbs) 96.00-107 50 (101.73); 650-700 lbs (678
lbs) 92 00- 101.00 (97.95); 700-725 lb calves (713 lbs) 97,00-99.50
(97 56). YEARLINGS' 500-600 lb thin (550 lbs) 108.00-116.00
(111 77), 600-700 lbs (650 lbs) 103 00-107 50 (104.64), 700-750 lbs (726
lbs) 105 00-108 00 (106 35), 750-800 lbs (771 lbs) 95 00-101 50
(100 23), 800-900 lbs (850 lbs) 93.00-98 00 (93 18)
FEEDER HEIFERS Medium and Large I CAIVES' 350-400 lbs
(386 lbs) 102 00-108 00 (104 57), 400-450 lbs (424 lbs) 100 50-108.50
(103 94), 450-500 lbs (484 lbs) 95 75-103 50 (100 10): 500-550 lbs (520
lbs) 91 00- 102 50 (94 73), 550-600 lbs (564 lbs) 86 50-96.00 (91 58);
600-700 lbs (650 lbs) 86 50-97 00 (89 %) YEARLINGS 550-600 lbs
(576 lbs) 99.00-105 25 (102 33), 600-700 lbs (650 lbs) 96 00-10025
(99.54), few 700-775 lbs (750 lbs) 91.00-95.00 (91.89)
Delmarva
Broiler/Fryer
ATLANTA, dA.
October 22,2003
Report Supplied By USDA
Movement of ready-to-whole birds had slow
ed and was seasonally light to fair at best Seller
offering were in close balance to fully adequate
on the larger sizes, fully adequate on the small
er. Live supplies were moderate, weights were
mostly desirable. Processing schedules were
moderate to moderately heavy Less than truck
lot asking prices were unchanged at 60 to 70
cents Trade sentiment was steady In the parts
complex, volumes differed from plant to plant,
but offerings were at least adequate.
ESTIMATED SLAUGHTER OF
BROILER/FRYERS IN DELMARVA (000)
ESTIMATED ACTUAL AVG. WEIGHT
ACTUAL AVG. WEIGHT 10/22 10/20 10/20
10/15 10/13
2,327 2,317 5.55 2,302 5.60
BROILER/FRYER CURRENT NEGOTI
ATED PRICES FOR IMMEDIATE DELIV
ERY INCLUDES MOSTLY MULTIPLE
DROP SHIPMENTS OF BRANDED AND
WING TAGGED TO NEW YORK CITY
FROM DELMARVA
BRANDED U.S. GRADE A RANGE 58-74
WEIGHTED AVERAGE 63.46 NO, OF
BOXES 9,012
Cattle On Feed
2 Percent Lower
Washington, D.C.
October 17,2003
Report Supplied By USDA/NASS
Cattle and calves on feed for slaughter mar
ket in the United States for feedlots with capac
ity of 1,000 or more head totaled 10.2 million
head on October 1, 2003. The inventoiy was 2
percent below October 1, 2002 and 8 percent
below October 1,2001.
The inventory included 6.24 million steers
and steer calves, down slightly from the previ-
ous year. This group accounted for 61 percent
of the total inventory. Heifers and heifer calves
accounted for 3.91 million head, down 4 percent
from 2002.
Placements in feedlots during September to
taled 2.47 million, 13 percent above 2002 and 16
percent above 2001. Net placements were 241
million
During September, placements of cattle and
calves weighing less than 600 pounds were
698,000, 600-699 pounds were 545,000, 700-799
pounds were 610,000, and 800 pounds and
greater were 621,000.
Marketings of fed cattle dunng September to
taled 2.03 million, 10 percent above 2002 and 11
percent above 2001
Other disappearance totaled 63,000 dunng
September, 19 percent above 2002 and 37 per
cent above 2001
U. S. Milk Production
Down 0.1 Percent In Sept.
Report Supplied By USDA/NASS
Milk production in the 20 major States dur
ing September totaled 11.6 billion pounds, down
0.1 percent from September 2002.
August revised production, at 12.1 billion
pounds, was down 0.9 percent from August
2002. The August revision represented a de
crease of 0.1 percent or 17 million pounds from
last month's preliminary production estimate.
Production per cow in the 20 major States av
eraged 1,503 pounds for September, 6 pounds
more from September 2002.
The number of milk cows on farms in the 20
major States was 7.74 millionhead, 38,000 head
less than September 2002, and 7,000 head less
than August 2003.
July-September Milk Production Down 0.6
Percent Milk production in the U.S. during the
July-September quarter totaled 41. S billion
pounds, down 0.6 percent from the July-Sep
tember quarter last year. The average number
of milk cows in the U.S. during the quarter was
9.07 million head, 88,000 head less than the
same period last year.
It’s Time To Lime!
When spreading stockpiled lime, for example.
The Stoltzfus Wet Lime Spreader is likely the most
powerful spreader of its kind on the market today.
You see, we’ve been building them since 1945, and
farmers are still using Stoltzfus Wet Lime Spreaders
they’ve had for 20, even 30 years. Our special drag
chain is 4 times stronger than stainless steel, and
handles frozen and heavy stockpiled lime with ease.
Plus for spreading compost, composted sludge,
poultry litter and certain fertilizers, the WLS is
without equal for sheer volume spreading.
• Two-ton, five-ton, eight-ton models
• PTO, 540 rpm or 1,000 rpm
• Two-speed conveyor chain
• Leaf spring suspension
• Dual 24 ” spinners
• Spreads 40' effectively
• One-sided spreading capability
• Truck-mounted models available
Washington, D. C.
October 17,2003
Morgan Way, P.O. Box 527, Morgantown, PA 19543
National Direct Feeder Pig Report
Week Bnding October 17, 2003
USDA Market News, Des Moines, lowa
Weekly Summary of prices on a farm to farm per head basis. FOB
is the price picked up at the seller's farm. DELIVERED is the price
unloaded at the buyer's farm, including trucking and broker's fees
RECEIPTS This Week 91,712, Last Week 99,625
VOLUME BY STATE OR PROVINCE OF ORIGIN
lowa 18 9% Oklahoma 14 % Ontario 2 0%
Minnesota 7 6% Nebraska S 8% Indiana 4 0%
Saskatchewan 15% Arkansas 1 4°/c Illinois 2 2*/f
Ohio 1 7% Kansas I 1% Alberta I 2%
North Dakota 1 1 % South Dakota 08%
VOLUME BY STATE OF DESTINATION
lowa 43 6% Minnesota 20 7% Nebraska 17 i%
No Carolina 3 3% Miossoun 2 9% Illinois 2 3 %
Wisconsin I !% Pennsylvania 08% Michigan 08%
TREND Compared to last week Early weaned pigs steady to 1 00 higher, 40
pound pigs steady, 45 and 50 pound feeder pigs uneven, 3 00 higher to 6 00
lower Demand light to moderate for moderate offerings Receipts include
52% formulated prices
Lot Size Total Head Price Range Wtd Avg : Price Range Wtd Avg
Per Trade Per Category FOB Seller FOB Delvrd Buyer Delvro
EARLY WEANED PIGS 10 POUNDS BASIS: Estimated 40-54% Lean Value
250 head or less 1,360 21 00-32 65 28 44 ■ 23.50-33 00 29 76
250-750 12,260 20 00-34.45 39.20 : 23 65-34.95 30 61
750 or more 35,062 19.00-33 67 30.15 ! 22 00-35.17 31.74
Total Composite 48,682 19.00-34.45 29.86 ' 22.00-35.17 31.40
FEEDER PIGS 40 POUNDS BASIS; Estimated 40-54% Lean Value
250 head or less 200 30 00 30 OO : 34 00 34 00
250-750 4,815 29 00-46.27 32.90 ’ 33 00-5127 37 02
750 or more 13,500 29 00-44.12 33.76 34 00-49 12 38 76
Total Composite 18,515 29.00-46.27 33.50 : 33.00-51.27 38.26
FEEDER PIGS 45 POUNDS BASIS Estimated 40-54% Lean Value
250-750 2,320 29.00-33.00 30 83 1 31 50-36.50 34.27
750 or more 10,150 28.00-50 61 37 32 ' 30 25-52 71 39 48
Total Composite 12,470 28.00-50.61 36.11 i 30.25-52.71 38.51
FEEDER PIGS SO POUNDS BASIS Estimated 40-54% Lean Value
250 head or less 475 38 50-16.59 41.31 I 40 00-47 59 42 55
250-750 990 34 50-48.00 40.64 ; 37.50-49.13 42 79
750 or more 5,400 41 00-50 00 44 78 I 46 00-51 00 48 03
Total Composite 6,865 43.50-50.00 43.94 I 37.50-51.00 46.89
FEEDER PIGS 55 POUNDS BASIS:
250-750 4,150 35 00-48.45
750 or more 5,200 35.50
Total Composite 5,200 35.00-48.45
Most lots of 40-60 weight pigs have a sliding value from the negotiated weight
basis which is calculated on the actual average weight of the load plus or minus 30-
40 per pound Some early weaned lots have a slide of 50-1.00 per pound Early
weaned pigs are under 19 days old Estimated lean value is projected to use slaugh
ter weights with normal confinement feeding conditions Vaccination and health pro
gram values are not included but health status should be disclosed.
Cut your fertilizer bill
by liberating nutrients
tied up by add soil.
1-800-843-8731
www.stoltzfusmfg.com
STOLTZFUS
37.29
35 50
36.93
Use Lime.
Manitoba 1
Missouri 3 9%
Michigan I 9%
Wisconsin 1 1 v /c
Indiana S 2%
Ohio I 7%
Tennessee 0 5%
40 00-53.45 42.29
40 50 40 50
40.00-53.45 41.93