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What's Age Verified worth?

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    What's Age Verified worth?

    Well is some places

    USPB is Currently Paying $35 Per Head Age and Source Verified
    Premium
    USPB is currently paying a $35 per head Age and Source Verified (ASV) premium for cattle that are verified as 20 months of age or younger and delivered to our Liberal and Dodge City facilities. This premium is dependent upon the Japanese trade remaining open to U.S. beef products and our plants continuing to be approved to export to Japan.

    Eligible ASV cattle must be shipped from a feedyard that is an approved supplier in a USDA certified supplier program. See Fact Sheet on USDA Age Verification Programs in the USPB Age and Source Verified Program section on USPB’s web page.

    Following are key points regarding the benefits of marketing cattle through USPB to receive age and source verified premiums and information that will help you participate
    in our ASV program:
    ● $35 per head for finished, age and source verified cattle that are 20 months of age or younger.
    ● ASV premiums are in addition to all premiums currently offered on USPB’s grids, including branded beef premiums such as Certified Angus Beef®.
    ● Individual carcass data is provided at no additional cost.
    ● A freight credit of up to $0.60 per cwt. to help reduce transportation costs to deliver cattle to our plants.
    ● A $1 per head rebate for EID tags on cattle marketed to USPB’s Kansas plants, paid upon request.

    Anybody ready to build our own packing plant yet?

    #2
    Sorry, I like the idea of producer owned plants but I'm not risking the capital required in the current environment (packer status quo and the AB Government backing of them)for a possible measly return of $35 or less extra per animal. Just doesn't make business sense for me.

    Comment


      #3
      So.... my question GF. You must have been around the block enough times that you think you know how big of an investment you might HAVETO make.

      So how much do think that would be?

      Secondly how much would you be willing to make with the right proposition?

      Comment


        #4
        wd, are you propositioning Grassfarmer??? ;o)

        Comment


          #5
          Well depends on what you mean by propositioning. However, everybody has a price and to make such a blanket statement actually means very little.

          Is someone expecting GF to invest $500,000; $100,000; $5000 or maybe $2000?

          He said he “I'm not risking the capital required”. So what does that mean? Build it himself or what.

          So again the real question is – If the right business plan was properly developed from good advice, etc, etc; -
          What is GF or anyone else willing to “put their money where their mouth is”!

          And before someone foams out at the mouth with all the problems and questions about all the how to’s.

          Let’s suppose, because we can and have to, because it ain’t gonna happen unless the “If the right business plan” is developed and put onto the table.

          So again how much, or rather I should say “how little” an amount would GF or anyone else be willing to invest in the future of the beef industry.

          The right plan is not the problem. That just takes effort, measurable effort. The really BIG question is do we have the will and how much will it take.

          Would you of GF or other put $1000 at risk or $2000 at risk or $3000. I’d like to know. Because once you know what volume of resources are there you build/match a plan to fit it.

          Comment


            #6
            Guaranteed 20% return on my capital. That's the price I would want to enter into a producer plant proposal in the future. I want cash too, not cattle processed in lieu. I am not interested in investing and "possibly" getting an enhanced return for cattle down the line if everything goes well, the plant gets built, and if the Cargills and Nilssons don't run you out of business.
            Might not be the answer you want but you asked the question.

            Comment


              #7
              I respect your position GF. So what you're saying is NO MATTER WHAT THE PICTURE, you'd never put any cash in the venture.

              I know your smart enough to know that you (basically) can't invest any capital in a guarateed ROI.

              Just to be clear here. Economics 101 - it takes cash to build something.

              And I know darn well that nothing you do from day to day 24/7/365 quarantees a fixed ROI.

              So no you're not willing to answer the simple basic question as have most of your peers.

              How much cold hard cash would I invest along with my neighbors to see a producer owned competitive plant? All thing being equal.

              I don't think that's such a hard question to answer. But it's one very few if any have answered yet.

              Comment


                #8
                I should add that I believe that with the right picture Cargill would go home and NB would wish they had not bought that old plant in Brooks!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Wd, come at it from the other direction if you are trying to raise capital for a plant. How many dollars do you need? Several of us have lost money going down this creek already so present your plan and see who steps up. I have to say though that there isn't much left my pot for these pursuits.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Not really true wd40. If you borrow money from a bank you know what it's going to cost you. If you borrow it from a venture capitalist it will come with an expected return or he won't participate. That's all I'm saying - I would invest as an investor for a given return.
                    I have wasted too much time listening to consultants who don't know the beef business, don't know the cattle business but claim to know how to structure a business plan. I've seen plenty of them do well out of the farmers initial stake investments and move onto their next project. Don't misunderstand me wd40 - I'm not labeling you in this category, I'm just sick of hearing from guys like that who urge investment from desperate producers with no idea if or how the deal will pan out but assured that their own wages and expenses are paid. To me that type of consultant has done more to scupper producer buy-in than anything else.
                    I honestly cannot see any form of producer owned or funded packing plant working successfully as long as it can be sabotaged by the existing packers and our own Government. That is partly why I would only invest for a 20% guaranteed return. I suspect that is also why we have not been overwhelmed with venture capitalist offers to fund such plants. In my experience if these guys think it can be done they will back you.
                    I'm unclear whether the situation changes enough if the cattle herd shrinks and we are left with one packer instead of two to open a new window of opportunity for producer owned capacity. How do you see that one play out?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I'd have to refelect on your last paragraph.

                      However let me tell you that I to sacrificed a year of my life to the point of laying all I had on the line.

                      Just cleared up my own BSE issue last March. Was in the service industry at the time so didn't benifit from any BSE funds.

                      However let me also tell you that the first thing a bunch of producers should do is load a bus and tour Kansas and USPB their value chain menbers and feeders.

                      We don't have to re-invent the wheel. The model is alreay a shinning light.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        We invested in a plant and a business
                        plan and lost our investment. That's
                        life and that's investing. It's just
                        money.
                        For myself, I would consider investing
                        again, however I have begun to ask, if
                        it is such a good investment for
                        investments' sake, shouldn't you just be
                        able to take the plan public and receive
                        financing through Bay street or the
                        general public? I don't see people
                        lining up to invest in beef processing
                        capacity. On the other hand, I think
                        there is some potential for custom kill
                        for a value chain, or negotiating with
                        an existing company such as USPB to
                        operate or come up with a creative plan
                        to run at least one of the existing
                        plants in Canada that is currently non
                        functional.
                        The chicken and egg, is that a market
                        has to exist for the beef to obtain a
                        premium for a producer owner, but the
                        beef has to exist to obtain a market.

                        Comment

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