World Markets

The Canadian meat protein industry has been downsized significantly in recent years and it will  be quite difficult to once again return to the levels enjoyed in the  first half of the past decade.   
Here’s what the latest data shows: 
The Canadian cattle inventory on 1 July, 2011 was reported at 13.870 million head, 105,000 head or 0.8 per cent lower  than a year ago.   
The Canadian cattle inventory has been  steadily declining in recent years, in line with the reduction in  the size of the breeding herd.  
The total cattle inventory in Canada peaked in 2005 at 16.880 million head but has declined ever  since, especially after shipments  of fed and feeder cattle to the  US resumed in 2007.   
The inventory of breeding animals also  has declined steadily in recent years as the industry struggled  with rising feed costs, limited export markets and the impact of  the global recession.   
Producers  liquidated a significant portion  of the beef and dairy herds and retained fewer heifers for herd  rebuilding.   
The total cow inventory on 1 July was 5.184 million  head, 1.7 per cent lower than a year ago. The entire decline came from  lower beef cow numbers, which  were reported at 4.202 million  head, 90,000 head or 2.1 per cent lower than a year ago and 22.7 per cent lower than on 1 July, 2005.   
The inventory of dairy cows has been  fairly steady at 982,000 head since 2008 and it remained at  those levels in the latest count.   
The 1 July cattle inventory  showed that beef cow replacement numbers on 1 July were  662,000 head, some 42,000 head or 6.7 per cent larger than a year ago.   
Improvements in pasture conditions and better returns have  provided an incentive for producers, particularly those in western states to embark on some herd rebuilding activities.   
The  rise in herd replacement numbers is another indication that the  cattle cycle in Canada may have finally hit bottom.  
 The total inventory of hogs and pigs in Canada as of 1  July was estimated at 11.895 million hogs, up 0.8 per cent compared to a  year ago. The inventory of breeding hogs was reported at 1.299 million  head, 1.2 per cent less than a year ago.   
The  decline in sow inventories was surprising as it appeared the breeding herd liquidation had bottomed.   
Feed cost pressures  and the strong Canadian dollar continue to take their toll, particularly on the feeder segment.   
The smaller sow herd led to a  sharp contraction in sow farrowings, which declined 3.4 per cent  compared to the previous year and in the pig crop, down 2.9 per cent  from  last year.   
Even with a smaller breeding herd, producers indicate  farrowing inventions for Q3 at –0.1 per cent and for Q4 at +0.2 per cent.   
It  remains to be seen if those intentions materialise.























