This is an excerpt from an American breed magazine. Figures are in American dollars.
Beef Industry Trends
Trend 6: Margins are Tight
Segment Profit Margin per head (10 year average)
Cow Calf $13.00 per head
Feeder $10.00 per head (includes yardage)
Packer $5-7.00 per head
Profit margins are historically tight and getting tighter. All three segments of the beef business are extremely competitive resulting in very low profit margins. From conception to consumption, the average return per animal is a mere $30 per head. These extremely narrow margins are forcing dramatic increases in consolidation at all three levels in order to get enough gross profit. Put another way, a single person would have to process, feed or raise the following to earn a $25,000 salary based on the 10 year average: Cow calf - 1923 cows, Feeder - 2500 feeders, Packer - 3571 carcasses.
Trend impacts:
1. Consolidation will continue to happen. Operations will have to get larger to earn enough income.
2. Increased difficulty for entry into the cow-calf businesss. Transfer of ownership from one generation to another or outside investors are the only viable opportunities for entry into the business.
3. Absentee ownership will become more widespread.
4. All of the cattle feeding profit is due to yardage. This makes retained ownership or custom feeding economically challenging.
5. Increased coordination among segments is likely to take place to offset the extremely tight margins in each of the three segments. Two of the four major packers (Swift & Company and Excel) are already coordinating genetics from conception to retail. Swift & Company is already coordinated with the second largest cattle feeder and is buying back feeder cattle sired by bulls sold through Swift Integrated Genetics. Excel Corporation, the nation's second largest packer owns Caprock Cattle Feeders (fourth largest feeder) and is purchasing genetics sired by Power Genetic bulls.
Don Schiefelbein, AGA Executive Director Don's brother Tim is a Marketing Director with Swift
Beef Industry Trends
Trend 6: Margins are Tight
Segment Profit Margin per head (10 year average)
Cow Calf $13.00 per head
Feeder $10.00 per head (includes yardage)
Packer $5-7.00 per head
Profit margins are historically tight and getting tighter. All three segments of the beef business are extremely competitive resulting in very low profit margins. From conception to consumption, the average return per animal is a mere $30 per head. These extremely narrow margins are forcing dramatic increases in consolidation at all three levels in order to get enough gross profit. Put another way, a single person would have to process, feed or raise the following to earn a $25,000 salary based on the 10 year average: Cow calf - 1923 cows, Feeder - 2500 feeders, Packer - 3571 carcasses.
Trend impacts:
1. Consolidation will continue to happen. Operations will have to get larger to earn enough income.
2. Increased difficulty for entry into the cow-calf businesss. Transfer of ownership from one generation to another or outside investors are the only viable opportunities for entry into the business.
3. Absentee ownership will become more widespread.
4. All of the cattle feeding profit is due to yardage. This makes retained ownership or custom feeding economically challenging.
5. Increased coordination among segments is likely to take place to offset the extremely tight margins in each of the three segments. Two of the four major packers (Swift & Company and Excel) are already coordinating genetics from conception to retail. Swift & Company is already coordinated with the second largest cattle feeder and is buying back feeder cattle sired by bulls sold through Swift Integrated Genetics. Excel Corporation, the nation's second largest packer owns Caprock Cattle Feeders (fourth largest feeder) and is purchasing genetics sired by Power Genetic bulls.
Don Schiefelbein, AGA Executive Director Don's brother Tim is a Marketing Director with Swift
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