Posted by elmo on Nov-8-04 10:04am
I received a written solicitation to re-establish my membership in the National Cattlemen's Beef Association (NCBA). I decline to do so. The NCBA and I are on the opposite sides of virtually every marketing issue facing the livestock industry that exists. In my opinion, the NCBA better represents the interests of Cargill/Excel's CEO Warren Staley, Tyson/IBP or the Canadian Cattlemen's Association than it does mine as an independent U.S. producer. Opposition to the Death Tax is always a big talking point with the NCBA. It's always seemed ironic to me that they are more worried about protecting estates than they are about creating them. They are mistaken that the inheritance tax is the primary threat to cattlemen's estates.
The NCBA has opposed Country of Origin Labeling (COOL). Oh, they spin it around like politicians that they support voluntary COOL but meat processors will never voluntarily close down the gold mine they are mining, buying foreign meat at foreign prices and selling it represented as U.S. product for U.S. prices. Tyson/IBP's U.S. cattle feeding partner, Cactus Feedlots, is joining with an Argentine company to eventually feed 200,000 cattle in South America. That's just the beginning of what's going to develop in new South American livestock production relationships as they integrate with U.S. companies. Global meat production potential has barely been scratched in places like South America where Brazil took the lead as the world's largest beef exporter this year. Cargill announced that they bought controlling interest in Seara Alimentos, Brazil's third largest poultry and pork firm for $130 million. "Seara is a natural extension of Cargill's worldwide poultry and pork processing business," said Sergio Barroso, president of Cargill in Brazil.
That's right. It's a natural extension of its integration of global procurement that will, in the not too distant future, be feeding US consumers on a regular basis who won't know where the meat they are eating was produced. The plan is for US meat integrators to outsource much of their beef, poultry, and pork procurement to overseas producers.
Work is being done at the WTO to open market access and history predicts that we will give market access that is greater than what we will receive. Ten years down the road the ability of U.S. meat processors to access foreign production importing it into the U.S., buying low, selling high, is worth billions of dollars to them. They are fighting implementation of COOL so aggressively now because they want to operate this gold mine at full capacity when the trade mechanisms allow them to. They are protecting their ability to put the machinery in place. COOL would force them to identify meat imports to U.S. consumers. Consumers may still buy it but usually at a different price, crimping the profitability of the deception.
That's the big picture and the NCBA has too small a perspective to grasp it. I've been to Brazil. I know what their plans are. I also know what plans U.S. integrators are working on and it will ultimately threaten the future of U.S. livestock production more than rural activists protesting citing of new facilities. The failure to implement COOL is a greater threat to U.S. cattlemen's estates than the Death Tax and the NCBA lacks the capacity to comprehend the risk. The NCBA undermines the estates of cattlemen every day with virtually every market policy they promote. Current cattle market circumstances are that supplies are not as tight as they were, beef demand is not handling production like it was and the market is not performing like feedlots would like. Without the beef demand dynamics we've come to count on, we can't kill as many cattle as we need to relative to the supply of market ready cattle.
One reason for the depressed beef product market performance is imports. Some still perceive that because the Canadian border is not open to live animals, it's closed. That's not the case. Canadian beef imports to the U.S. were up 23% so far this year. Beef is pouring south from Canada because they can't export it anywhere else.
I was under the wrong impression that the global beef export trade had shifted around with more beef from countries going to Japan that would otherwise be exporting it here. That's not what's happened. U.S. beef imports from Argentina were up 4% thus far in 2004. Our beef exports shut off as a result of BSE fallout, but our beef imports surged, attracted by high U.S. prices. The attraction is cheap meat from overseas that can be sold for U.S. prices, represented as U.S. products. The first 6 months of 2004 we imported 1.8 billion lbs of beef but exported only 155 mln lbs. Our beef trade deficit has mushroomed into something that's damaging our market.
The NCBA, of course, doesn't want to require these imports to be identified, in fact, they want to open the border to Canadian live cattle too while refusing to sell Japan BSE tested beef like the Canadian's reportedly now plan to do. NCBA President Jan Lyons claims the organization represents 230,000 US cattlemen. Make that 229,999 without me.
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Current thread:
ncba elmo Nov-8-04 10:04am
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 10:23am
Re: ncba elmo Nov-8-04 10:28am
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 11:02am
Re: ncba Bev in West Dakota Nov-8-04 11:47am
Re: ncba GF Nov-8-04 12:38pm
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Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 3:49pm
Re: ncba I guess youd know Nov-8-04 6:27pm
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 6:51pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-9-04 7:20am
Re: ncba GF Nov-9-04 7:56am
Re: ncba Tam Nov-9-04 1:16pm
Re: ncba MRJ Nov-9-04 2:22pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 3:42pm
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 6:48pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-9-04 7:28am
Re: ncba MRJ Nov-8-04 2:01pm
Re: ncba SAY prarie dog,OT aint Nov-8-04 3:52pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 3:05pm
Re: ncba you know how to bring Nov-8-04 3:56pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 5:28pm
Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 6:04pm
Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 6:08pm
Re: ncba CattleCo Nov-9-04 6:30am
Re: ncba.....NEWSFLASH, for elmo MRJ Nov-9-04 1:37pm
I received a written solicitation to re-establish my membership in the National Cattlemen's Beef Association (NCBA). I decline to do so. The NCBA and I are on the opposite sides of virtually every marketing issue facing the livestock industry that exists. In my opinion, the NCBA better represents the interests of Cargill/Excel's CEO Warren Staley, Tyson/IBP or the Canadian Cattlemen's Association than it does mine as an independent U.S. producer. Opposition to the Death Tax is always a big talking point with the NCBA. It's always seemed ironic to me that they are more worried about protecting estates than they are about creating them. They are mistaken that the inheritance tax is the primary threat to cattlemen's estates.
The NCBA has opposed Country of Origin Labeling (COOL). Oh, they spin it around like politicians that they support voluntary COOL but meat processors will never voluntarily close down the gold mine they are mining, buying foreign meat at foreign prices and selling it represented as U.S. product for U.S. prices. Tyson/IBP's U.S. cattle feeding partner, Cactus Feedlots, is joining with an Argentine company to eventually feed 200,000 cattle in South America. That's just the beginning of what's going to develop in new South American livestock production relationships as they integrate with U.S. companies. Global meat production potential has barely been scratched in places like South America where Brazil took the lead as the world's largest beef exporter this year. Cargill announced that they bought controlling interest in Seara Alimentos, Brazil's third largest poultry and pork firm for $130 million. "Seara is a natural extension of Cargill's worldwide poultry and pork processing business," said Sergio Barroso, president of Cargill in Brazil.
That's right. It's a natural extension of its integration of global procurement that will, in the not too distant future, be feeding US consumers on a regular basis who won't know where the meat they are eating was produced. The plan is for US meat integrators to outsource much of their beef, poultry, and pork procurement to overseas producers.
Work is being done at the WTO to open market access and history predicts that we will give market access that is greater than what we will receive. Ten years down the road the ability of U.S. meat processors to access foreign production importing it into the U.S., buying low, selling high, is worth billions of dollars to them. They are fighting implementation of COOL so aggressively now because they want to operate this gold mine at full capacity when the trade mechanisms allow them to. They are protecting their ability to put the machinery in place. COOL would force them to identify meat imports to U.S. consumers. Consumers may still buy it but usually at a different price, crimping the profitability of the deception.
That's the big picture and the NCBA has too small a perspective to grasp it. I've been to Brazil. I know what their plans are. I also know what plans U.S. integrators are working on and it will ultimately threaten the future of U.S. livestock production more than rural activists protesting citing of new facilities. The failure to implement COOL is a greater threat to U.S. cattlemen's estates than the Death Tax and the NCBA lacks the capacity to comprehend the risk. The NCBA undermines the estates of cattlemen every day with virtually every market policy they promote. Current cattle market circumstances are that supplies are not as tight as they were, beef demand is not handling production like it was and the market is not performing like feedlots would like. Without the beef demand dynamics we've come to count on, we can't kill as many cattle as we need to relative to the supply of market ready cattle.
One reason for the depressed beef product market performance is imports. Some still perceive that because the Canadian border is not open to live animals, it's closed. That's not the case. Canadian beef imports to the U.S. were up 23% so far this year. Beef is pouring south from Canada because they can't export it anywhere else.
I was under the wrong impression that the global beef export trade had shifted around with more beef from countries going to Japan that would otherwise be exporting it here. That's not what's happened. U.S. beef imports from Argentina were up 4% thus far in 2004. Our beef exports shut off as a result of BSE fallout, but our beef imports surged, attracted by high U.S. prices. The attraction is cheap meat from overseas that can be sold for U.S. prices, represented as U.S. products. The first 6 months of 2004 we imported 1.8 billion lbs of beef but exported only 155 mln lbs. Our beef trade deficit has mushroomed into something that's damaging our market.
The NCBA, of course, doesn't want to require these imports to be identified, in fact, they want to open the border to Canadian live cattle too while refusing to sell Japan BSE tested beef like the Canadian's reportedly now plan to do. NCBA President Jan Lyons claims the organization represents 230,000 US cattlemen. Make that 229,999 without me.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current thread:
ncba elmo Nov-8-04 10:04am
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 10:23am
Re: ncba elmo Nov-8-04 10:28am
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 11:02am
Re: ncba Bev in West Dakota Nov-8-04 11:47am
Re: ncba GF Nov-8-04 12:38pm
Re: ncba thunder Nov-8-04 1:57pm
Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 3:49pm
Re: ncba I guess youd know Nov-8-04 6:27pm
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 6:51pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-9-04 7:20am
Re: ncba GF Nov-9-04 7:56am
Re: ncba Tam Nov-9-04 1:16pm
Re: ncba MRJ Nov-9-04 2:22pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 3:42pm
Re: ncba Oldtimer Nov-8-04 6:48pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-9-04 7:28am
Re: ncba MRJ Nov-8-04 2:01pm
Re: ncba SAY prarie dog,OT aint Nov-8-04 3:52pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 3:05pm
Re: ncba you know how to bring Nov-8-04 3:56pm
Re: ncba ~SH~ Nov-8-04 5:28pm
Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 6:04pm
Re: ncba HAY MAKER Nov-8-04 6:08pm
Re: ncba CattleCo Nov-9-04 6:30am
Re: ncba.....NEWSFLASH, for elmo MRJ Nov-9-04 1:37pm
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