Pork markets rebound on easing US-China trade tensions - CME
Cattle futures hit record highs as US halts Mexican importsChicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) live cattle and feeder cattle futures notched lifetime highs on Monday after Washington suspended cattle imports from Mexico over a flesh-eating parasite, which Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum denounced as unfair, Reuters reported, citing traders.
New World screwworm maggots burrow into open wounds on cattle and other animals, often killing their host within weeks. Though the US eradicated screwworm in 1966, the Department of Agriculture has issued a warning about the potential risk of its re-introduction.
The suspension of cattle imports from Mexico will further tighten the supply of cattle, already at its lowest in decades.
CME June live cattle futures settled 2.15 cents higher to 216.825 cents per pound. August feeder cattle futures rose 6.075 cents to 306.375 cents per pound.
CME June lean hog futures rose 0.725 cent to close at 98.3 cents per pound.
The US and China agreed on Monday to temporarily slash their steep tariffs on each other, helping to propel livestock futures higher as the world's top two economies tapped the brakes on a trade war that had fed fears of a global recession.
The loss of China as an export market for US pork products amid the ongoing trade war had weighed heavily on hog futures.
While most US beef plants are unable to export beef to China after the country declined to renew export registrations, the thawing US-China trade relationship has brought positive sentiment into the market, traders said.
"There's optimism that they might let beef imports come back in but that's speculation on the part of the market," independent livestock trader Dan Norcini said.
Choice cuts of boxed beef were last up $2.17 to $348.14 per hundredweight on Monday afternoon, while select cuts rose $4.06 to $335.23 per hundredweight, according to the US Department of Agriculture data. The losses came after multiple weeks of steady gains.