Because as the price of corn surges higher and higher on the commodities markets, some publications have begun their watch of how it might affect cattle futures, and inevitably the cost of our steaks.
And corn isn’t just inching up slowly, today’s WSJ not only refers to a two year high of $5.79 a bushel (a figure that hit the limits allowed by The Chicago Board of Trade), it also shows that corn has shown 17% rise in price over the last 3 days.
The piece even goes so far as to quote an agricultural analyst who makes the claim that he “can smell $6 now.”
While the cause and effect between corn and cattle prices can be sometimes be viewed as not having immediate reciprocal impact, the signs in this case are already apparent.
A report on Bloomberg this Monday quoted a cattle futures analyst who reported data demonstrating that the U.S. annual per-capita beef supply for 2011 might plummet to a 35 year low of 46.8 pounds.
Any slump, or surge for that matter, in American beef production will have influence on retail prices, but a nosedive this dramatic will have more immediately negative impact on beef’s affordability for the average American consumer.
In fact, the very same report on Bloomberg foresees such a swift swelling in the cost of American beef that the rise in its value might outpace the rate of inflation on all U.S. food combined.
Unfortunately, this will be a bigger story in the months and years to come, as cattle aren’t commodities that can be discovered or harvested early. American cattle takes an average of three years to mature and even longer in the case of more “gourmet” strains of beef, like grass-fed for example.
And as corn is a major feeding crop for farm animals nationwide, we can expect to see the costs of other meats rise as well.
Bacon prices, for instance, are the highest they’ve been since the Carter Administration as the cost of feeding pigs, and thus maintaining equilibrium in the market for pork belly continues to be more and more expensive.
So it looks like “that place” you love with that “super cheap bacon cheeseburger” might be changing price points sooner than later…so can we here at “The Biz” interest you all in any genetically-altered Salmon while you wait? They’re corn free you know…
(editor's note) We here at “The Gastro Biz” are hot on the trails of some quotes from NYC restaurateurs to see what they’re seeing on the wholesale side of things and will update when we get one or two.
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