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A griculture & B usiness M anagement Management Issues in 2003 For Beef Cattle Producers Jeffrey E. Tranel Agricultural & Business Management Economist.

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Presentation on theme: "A griculture & B usiness M anagement Management Issues in 2003 For Beef Cattle Producers Jeffrey E. Tranel Agricultural & Business Management Economist."— Presentation transcript:

1 A griculture & B usiness M anagement Management Issues in 2003 For Beef Cattle Producers Jeffrey E. Tranel Agricultural & Business Management Economist

2 Cows Liquidated in 2002 Several cows sold in 2002. –Estimated 15-20% of all beef cows sold. –Estimated 50+% of beef cows sold in some areas. Some herds were moved to pasture in other states. –Primarily Tx, Ok, Ne, Ks, Mo. Shall they return?

3 Drought and Livestock No good strategies-all are expensive Using Partial Budgets to Compare Options –Truck cow/calf pairs to grass –Feed (drylot) at home –Sell and buy-back pairs –Early wean calves, sell cows-drylot calves, buy-back pairs

4 Typical Partial Budget Positive Outcomes –Reduced Costs –Increased Returns –Total Positive Negative Outcomes –Reduced Returns –Increased Costs –Total Negative Positive – Negative = Net Impact

5 How Did the Drought in 2002 Affect Your Cattle Operation? 1.Maintained Herd. Profitability in 2002? Future? Conception rates? Forage resources? Family? Other?

6 Maintaining the Cow Herd - Reason For Not Liquidating - Genetics Adapting to the environment Sufficient feed resources Financial considerations Debt greater than sale value of cow? Insufficient equity resources. Personal?

7 Maintaining the Cow Herd - Purchasing Feed - Availability of feed? Cost of feed? Cost of transporting feed? Availability & cost for feeding? Considerations –Make every effort to reduce costs. –Get the “most mileage” from available feeds. –Supplement low-quality feeds correctly. –Balance rations for animal needs. –Account for feed cost, nutrient value, palatability.

8 Maintaining the Cow Herd - Trucking Animals to Grass - Availability of pasture? Transportation costs? Pasture lease rates? Length of time? Death loss and other health problems? Trust of leased pasture manager?

9 Early Weaning Calves Calves can be weaned at 120 days of age. With proper management and feeding, can equal weight of calves raised on cows. More efficient to feed calf directly than through the cow. Improved and earlier conception rates. –Re-breeding may improve 10-25%.

10 How Did the Drought in 2002 Affect Your Cattle Operation? 2. Sold Part of Herd. 3. Sold Whole Herd. Profitability in 2002? Future? Conception rates? Forage resources? Family? Income Taxes? Additional Capital Gains Taxes? Other?

11 Decision Aid: What to Do With My Cows? An Excel spreadsheet designed to help the user decide whether it may be best to: Feed different rations. Truck cattle to pasture. Early wean and sell cows. Sell herd (make 1033e election).

12 If Cattle Sold Funds Need to be Available to: Replace livestock Escrow Account Debt Reduction with Contingent Liability Low Risk Investment Reduce Operating Debt (line of credit) Pay taxes Pre-pay term debt Use for operating expenses Use for family living

13 Should You Replace the Herd? 1033e Election? Resources Available? Risks? Production Market Financial Legal Human

14 1033e Election Qualified taxpayers may make or not make election to recognize additional capital gains when they file their 2002 income tax return.

15 Should You Get Back into the Cattle Business? Personal and family issues. Business risks. Range/pasture recovery. Financing alternatives. Profitability.

16 Personal & Family Issues Age Health Stress Personal Goals Family Goals Equity Management Personalities

17 Business Risks Production risks. Marketing risks. Financial risks. Legal risks. Human risks.

18 Financing Alternatives Commercial Banks/Farm Credit Services USDA/Rural Development Federal & State Assistance Programs –Colorado Department of Agriculture –Farm Service Agency –Risk Management Agency Family

19 Profitability? Production expenses. Price of replacement animals. Outlook for cattle prices.

20 Cost & Returns for Beef Cow-Calf Colorado, 2000-01 CSU Livestock Enterprise Budget, 250 cows, $/Cow Steers = 555 lbs @ $97.60 Heifers = 535 lbs @ $92.46 Plus cull cows + bulls

21 Sept. 2002

22 2003 Projected

23 In 13 th Year of Cycle Current Cycle Longest on Record

24 Cattle Feeders Losing Money in 2002

25 Cattle Price Forecasts 500-600 lb Steers LMICFUTURES+ BASISCO ‘02 Q4 86-9083.45$8.67$ 92 ‘03 Q1 91-9581.45$15.48$ 97 ‘03 Q2 93-9880$17.56$98 ‘03 Q3 94-10182.5$ 9.43$ 92 ‘03 Q4 90-9882$8.67$ 91

26 Cattle Price Forecasts 700-800 lb Steers LMICERSFUT+ BasisCO ‘02 Q4 77-7977-8183.45-$0.42$83 ‘03 Q1 78-8179-8581.45-$0.75$81 ‘03 Q2 79-8382-8880$0.06$80 ‘03 Q3 80-8482.5-$0.48$83 ‘03 Q4 79-8582-$0.42$82

27 1033e Decision Tool (An Excel Template)

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31 Contacting Your ABM Economists Norm Dalsted (970) 491-5627 ndalsted@colostate.edu Dennis Kaan (970) 345-2287 dkaan@colostate.edu Tim Bachicha (719) 852-2871 slvfrma@colostate.edu Rod Sharp (970) 245-9149 rsharp@colostate.edu Jeff Tranel (719) 549-2049 jtranel@colostate.edu Wendy Umberger (970) 491-7261 wumberger@colostate.edu http://www.coopext.colostate.edu/ABM/

32 jtranel@colostate.edu www.coopext.colostate.edu/ABM/Present


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