U.S. livestock: Live cattle book third day of gains

CME to change cattle futures trading rules

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Published: May 19, 2020

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CME June 2020 live cattle, with 20-, 50- and 100-day moving averages. (Barchart)

Chicago | Reuters — U.S. live cattle futures rose for the third day in a row on Monday, hitting their highest since April 1, with ongoing strength in the cash markets leading the way higher, traders said.

Hog contracts were lower, with the front-month contract sinking to its lowest since April 29.

The nearby CME June live cattle futures contract settled Monday up 1.725 cents at 98.725 cents/lb., while August live cattle ended up 1.025 cent at 98.85 cents/lb. (all figures US$).

June live cattle futures faced technical resistance at the contract’s 100-day moving average, a level it has not risen above since January 24.

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Feeder cattle contracts also were stronger, with the August contract rising 1.475 cents, to 132.55 cents/lb.

CME June lean hogs eased 0.225 cent to 57.65 cents/lb. and the July contract ended down 0.1 cent at 57.65 cents/lb.

New Hope Group, one of China’s biggest pig breeders, expects the country’s hog output to recover from last year’s disease epidemic by 2021, while prices will start to fall after a rush of new entrants into pig farming, chairman Liu Yonghao said Monday.

CME Group said Monday it was changing the trading rules regarding its live cattle and feeder cattle contracts to ensure they had the same price limits on every trading day. Previously, price limits for one of the contracts could expand after limit moves while the other stayed the same.

— Mark Weinraub is a Reuters commodities correspondent in Chicago.

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Mark Weinraub

Commodities correspondent, Reuters

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