InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 19
Posts 2070
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 01/14/2005

Re: None

Monday, 03/12/2007 7:52:51 PM

Monday, March 12, 2007 7:52:51 PM

Post# of 3005
MEAT: Ethanol boom likely to boost prices of meat
By Libby Quaid
Associated Press
Sat, Mar. 10, 2007

Lynn Barry unloads corn to be processed at the Tall Corn Ethanol plant in Co/on Rapids, Iowa. A high demand for corn from ethanol plants is causing the cost of livestock to increase, which boosts prices for beef, pork and chicken.

WASHINGTON – Strong demand for corn from ethanol plants is driving up the cost of livestock and will raise prices for beef, pork and chicken, the Agriculture Department said Friday.

Meat and poultry production will fall as producers face higher feed costs, the department said in its monthly crop report. Ethanol fuel, which is blended with gasoline, is consuming 20 percent of last year’s corn crop and is expected to gobble up more than 25 percent of this year’s crop.

The price of corn, the main feed for livestock, has driven the cost of feeding chickens up 40 percent, according to the National Chicken Council. The council says that chicken, the most popular meat with consumers, will soon cost more at the grocery store. The industry worries the competition from ethanol could cause a shortage of corn.

The average price of corn, unchanged from last month, is $3.20 a bushel, up from $2 last year.

While chicken producer Tyson Foods Inc. posted its first profitable quarter in a year Jan. 29, executives warned that a dramatic rise in feed costs will raise chicken prices.

“Companies will be forced to pass along rising costs to their customers, meaning consumers will pay significantly more for food,” Chief Executive Di/ck Bond said.

Deputy Agriculture Secretary Chuck Conner said USDA is keeping an eye on corn supply and demand. Demand likely will prompt farmers to plant more acres in corn, he said.

“We do have confidence in the marketplace’s ability to react,” Conner said. “We believe producers are seeing the market saying, ‘I need more corn, not only for ethanol, but for our feed needs in this country.’ ”

The department will issue planting predictions later this month.

For soybeans, analysts said prices are averaging $6.30 a bushel, up from last month’s average of $6.20. Last year’s price was $5.66. Wheat prices are averaging $4.25 a bushel, unchanged from last month and up from $3.42 last year.

Also in the crop report, the department updated the citrus forecast to include the effects of a January freeze on California oranges. The California crop will be 39 percent smaller than last year, and combined with freezes that are expected to reduce the Florida crop, the nation’s crop is expected to be 18 percent smaller than last season.

Shares of Archer Daniels Midland Co., the country’s biggest ethanol producer, fell 36 cents to $34.45 in morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Shares of Tyson fell 6 cents to $17.99.

http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/journalgazette/16876428.htm

Got agricultural exposure?

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.