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Where’s The Beef? (MEAT PRICES SKYROCKET)
The mountain Times ^ | 11/03/03 | Kathleen McFadden

Posted on 11/03/2003 10:44:33 PM PST by ppaul

Shortage Expected to Cause Prices to Skyrocket

Worth their weight in gold? At least one local restaurant has already changed its pricing because of high beef prices, and grocery store prices are anticipated to jump soon.

“An astronomical increase,” is the way Ted Mackorell of Makoto Seafood and Steak House described the jump in beef prices this week. “It has been inching up on us for the last month,” Mackorell said, “but both of our purveyors came in this morning and said, ‘Brace yourself.’” Over the past month and a half, Mackorell explained, his beef prices have increased by about 60 percent. “It’s dramatic; it’s huge,” he added.

According to Makoto’s Gwen Dhing, the restaurant’s food distributors, who generally guarantee prices for one week, cannot guarantee beef prices from one day to the next because the cost is increasing daily. Consequently, the restaurant is changing its menus for all beef items from regular prices to “market price.”

Added to the economic uncertainty is uncertainty over availability. Dhing said that the distributors do not yet have the beef to fill the restaurant’s current order. She said the restaurant has enough filet to last through the weekend, but after that, depending on prices, Makoto’s may have to replace filet with rib eye charged at market price or drop the offering altogether until prices stabilize. “There comes a point,” Mackorell explained, “where you can’t carry an item because the price is too high.” Dhing pointed out that Makoto’s is “lucky because we have seafood and chicken as well as beef.”

Although the beef shortage is affecting supplies nationwide, the dramatic price increases have not yet hit the grocery stores because of the grocery chains’ contract pricing agreements. When those contracts are renewed, however, prices are expected to jump significantly. “This is the first people are hearing about these price increases,” Dhing said. She said that the restaurant’s suppliers are predicting that the high prices will continue for the next six to nine months, into the first quarter of 2004.

The shortage is the result of two factors: decreased U.S. production and one infected cow in Canada. Last year’s low cattle prices caused producers to reduce their herds, and the decrease in U.S. cows coincided with the discovery last May of an Alberta cow that was infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, commonly known as mad cow disease. The United States immediately closed its borders to Canadian beef imports and while that ban was partially lifted in August, the current beef supply cannot meet U.S. demand.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the United States is the primary destination for Canadian beef exports. Of the 1.2 million metric tons of beef that Canada exported in 2002, 83 percent of it went to U.S. markets. That’s a lot of beef taken out of the supply chain.

Just down the street from Makoto’s, Debbie Broome said that the price increases have hit the Peddler Steak House even harder.

“It has become a crisis this week,” Broome said. “We learned this week that prices will double and perhaps triple by Christmas.” Beef tenderloin, for example, is predicted to reach $22 per pound in late December, she said, a price that would require the restaurant to discontinue the offering from its menu.

Broome said that the price jump couldn’t have come at a worse time. “October is our biggest month of the year,” she said, “and we count on it to profit enough to make it through the winter. This year, we won’t have that cushion.”

At this point, there are no plans to increase prices at the steak house. The Broomes plan to attend two or three upcoming food shows to “do the best shopping we can,” hoping to contract for enough beef at reasonable prices to ride out the rest of the year. “We hope it’s turned around by January,” Broome said.

So far, she has not encountered any problems with availability. “It’s not that we can’t get what we need, but the price goes up daily,” Broome said.

Unlike Makoto’s and the Peddler, which only this week encountered high beef prices, the local Wendy’s has been dealing with the bovine price jump for almost two months. Tad Dolbier, vice president of Tar Heel Capital Corporation, says that wholesale beef prices increased approximately 40 percent around the first of September. Wendy’s, because of its buying practices, was able to hold the increase to about 15 percent, but it “caused food costs to go up pretty considerably,” Dolbier said. Dolbier admitted some perplexity over why other restaurants were only now finding their costs increasing, but said, “Retail prices typically lag behind wholesale prices and maybe they have just now caught up.”

On a positive note, Dolbier added that the restaurant has not seen additional prices increases since September 29, and Wendy’s corporate office is predicting “leveling prices from now through the end of the year.” But Dolbier points out that because the market is “still very unstable, it’s so hard to predict what will happen.” A Wendy’s Beef Market Bulletin dated October 17, identifies the mad cow in Alberta as the precipitating event that resulted in “driving U.S. cattle and beef prices into record-high ground.” The Wendy’s bulletin points out that the average wholesale price of beef in the United States has gone up 40 percent.

Dolbier added, “One of the things that has reduced the impact of the price jump is that Wendy’s does a smaller portion of total sales in beef, with higher sales in chicken and salads.”

Although costs rose almost a full percentage point due to the beef hit, Wendy’s has not raised the prices for its hamburgers and chili. The company philosophy, Dolbier said, is to ride out short-term price fluctuations. “We don’t anticipate making any moves in prices,” he said, but he also acknowledged that the beef increase “is a big chunk for us.”



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: agriculture; beef; cattle; commodities; economy; farmers; farms; food; foodprices; groceries; meat; prices; wheresthebeef
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What a buncha bull!
I'll bet the farmers aren't getting any more per pound for their cattle.
Today I stopped to do some grocery shopping at my local Sam's Club. I was shocked to see the price of steaks: from $5.98 a pound just three months ago (too darned expensive even then) to $10.88 a pound today! What gives? Does anyone know the real reason why there has been a sudden surge in beef prices? When steaks went up to $5.98 a pound a year ago, the butcher guy said it was because of the European "hoof and mouth disease" plague. Okay. But the disease has been over with and prices never went back down. Now, they've skyrocketed. Anybody know why? Really? What's the deal?

1 posted on 11/03/2003 10:44:34 PM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
Good thing my husband is a hunter. He can just shoot a chunk of country beef right out in our front yard.
2 posted on 11/03/2003 10:50:40 PM PST by concerned about politics ( As a rightous man declarith a thing, so shall it be.)
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To: concerned about politics
Chicken or pork. It's whats for dinner.
3 posted on 11/03/2003 10:56:22 PM PST by TheConservator (To what office do I apply to get my tag line back????)
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To: TheConservator
Chicken or pork. It's whats for dinner.

Yeah.
But there's nothin' like a good ol' steak.
But I suppose I'll be eatin' a whole lot more chicken (and pork ribs - yum!).
And, for the first time ever, jumbo shrimp is cheaper than beef!

4 posted on 11/03/2003 10:59:40 PM PST by ppaul
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To: TheConservator
Chicken or pork. It's whats for dinner.

Not to mention ground turkey. They're practically giving it away here it's so cheap.

5 posted on 11/03/2003 11:00:20 PM PST by Reaganwuzthebest
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: Santini
You're lucky. Boneless ribeyes here have gone to $14 a pound. Out of my reach!

That's about what they're going for in the supermarkets - Safeway, etc.
But why?

7 posted on 11/03/2003 11:04:26 PM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul; AAABEST; Ace2U; Alamo-Girl; Alas; amom; AndreaZingg; Anonymous2; ApesForEvolution; ...
Rights, farms, environment ping.

Let me know if you wish to be added or removed from this list.
I don't get offended if you want to be removed.

For real time political chat - Radio Free Republic chat room

8 posted on 11/03/2003 11:12:02 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: Santini
I think it's because so many people are going to the Atkins diet.

LOL
Could be, I suppose.

10 posted on 11/03/2003 11:16:27 PM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
Probably PETA...
11 posted on 11/03/2003 11:21:29 PM PST by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: FormerLib; katnip
Just in time for the Nativity fast.
12 posted on 11/03/2003 11:22:09 PM PST by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: concerned about politics
Michael Moore is all yallow fat... tell DH he's wasting his time
13 posted on 11/03/2003 11:23:13 PM PST by cyborg (Kyk nou, die ding wat jy soek issie hierie sienj)
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To: ppaul
Wow, they must have forgotten about us.

I paid 2.49 a pound for ground veal yesterday and 1.99 a pound for ground sirloin on the same trip. Turkey breast was 1.69 a pound (we bought 3 of them), and some really primo lamb chops for 2.99 a pound.

Whole chickens were less than a dollar a pound, so we bought 4 of them on the same trip.

We're going to pick up 10 pounds or so of pork bellies tomorrow. It's advertised at .99 a pound. (We smoke our own bacon. It's easy to do, and delicious. Plus there aren't any nitrites in it. Yummy!)

When I do the math, all that beef and pork is going to be way cheaper than the deer I'll (hopefully) bag next week. The licenses, beer, and gas are going to be over 200 bucks. That puts the cost of fresh venison over 3 dollars a pound. That's still a bargain to my mind.

I guess the writer of this article just doesn' know how to shop.

L

14 posted on 11/03/2003 11:25:37 PM PST by Lurker (Some people say you shouldn't kick a man when he's down. I say there's no better time to do it.)
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To: Lurker
How do you make bacon out of pork bellies?
15 posted on 11/03/2003 11:34:20 PM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
There are several factors that are immediately contributing to the relatively high price of cattle, and hence the relatively high price of steak.

In no particular order, they are: 1) banks are pulling credit lines from feedlots; the bankers are no longer willing to play ''on the come'' that feedlots will become profitable one day. Oh, they are NOW, but this is post-credit-line-being-pulled, and the old-fashioned small or smallish feeder operation is in DIRE straits, 2) more immediately, large chunks of the Canadian beef mkt are hung out to dry -- the discovery of a cow with BSE in May (possibly off by 1 month in the date) has led to a ban on the importation of slaughter beef from Canada that MAY (emphasis ''MAY'') be rescinded in 2004, February from what I hear; meantime, we're short of critters, 3) packers, realising the shortage of immediately available animals, have been buying well over their immediate needs, and have done for months -- they can't stand to be caught short of critters, have to keep the knives turning after all, right?, 4) cattle farmers are hedging the board MUCH less than, say, a year or two years ago -- many of them are either feeding grass or wagering (correctly, in my view) that they can fatten locally and ship to mkt as convenient, bypassing feedlots entirely, 5) the demand for ''heart-healthy'' beef (i.e. grass-fed, w/ or w/o hormones) is increasing apace ... which, btw, I happen to think is silly -- if you want ''heart-healthy'' beef and your health isn't immediately fragile -- TRIM the sumbich, then eat it.

Whole lot of things going on (and I've missed out a few) in the cattle mkt right now. I wouldn't complain at either the farmer or the packer, I'd merely suggest putting urban Regresscritters in the ring for auction.

Do as you like, of course, and FReegards!

16 posted on 11/03/2003 11:44:41 PM PST by SAJ
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To: SAJ
Thanks for the analysis.
Of course, like I said, I am sure the farmer gets no benefit whatsoever from the increased prices.
17 posted on 11/04/2003 12:08:52 AM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
Well, if you really want to know, you get the pork bellies from your local butcher.

Then, you cover them with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Next, you heat up your smoker. I prefer a mix of cherry and maple chips for bacon, but lots of folks like hickory. Any of them will do, however.

Now, place the bellies in your smoker. We use a propane powered one, but electics work well too, so I understand. Be prepared to spend the next 10 or 11 hours watching your smoker.

Don't let the temperature in your smoker exceed 175 degrees, and make sure there's always plenty of wood chips soaking to replace the ones which turn to charcoal. (Save the ones which turn to charcoal in your smoker. You can use them in your Barbeque kettle.)

After your bellies are well smoked, (a minimum of 8 hours, but we like to go a few hours longer) remove them from the smoker. Wrap them in foil and put them in the freezer for an hour or so. Then remove them and remove the skin with a sharp knife. Then, slice your now well smoked bacon with a sharp knife about a quarter of an inch thick.

Put a pound or so in the fridge, and freeze the rest. It will keep for 6 months or so if you wrap it tightly.

It may seem like a lot of work, but believe me Paul, there's nothing in the world like home-smoked bacon. The flavor is out of this world, and it's all preservative and chemical free.

Sorry if I gave you too much info, but I really love the stuff. The Smoker we bought is the best money we've spent in the last year or so hands down.

Regards,

L

18 posted on 11/04/2003 12:16:28 AM PST by Lurker (Some people say you shouldn't kick a man when he's down. I say there's no better time to do it.)
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To: Lurker
Sounds pretty darn awesome.
Thanks.
19 posted on 11/04/2003 12:26:06 AM PST by ppaul
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To: ppaul
No problem. Let me know if you need a source for a good smoker.

Take care,

L

20 posted on 11/04/2003 12:58:22 AM PST by Lurker (Some people say you shouldn't kick a man when he's down. I say there's no better time to do it.)
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