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Economic Considerations for Stocking Rate Decisions

Economic Considerations for Stocking Rate Decisions. Kenny Burdine Agricultural Economics. Goals for Today. Discuss stocking rates basics and way to look at them Walk through the new beef budgets Think through how stocking rate effects the overall beef budget

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Economic Considerations for Stocking Rate Decisions

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  1. Economic Considerations for Stocking Rate Decisions Kenny Burdine Agricultural Economics

  2. Goals for Today • Discuss stocking rates basics and way to look at them • Walk through the new beef budgets • Think through how stocking rate effects the overall beef budget • Try to group producers into optimal categories

  3. Basic Situation • Nobody’s happy • Costs are up, calf prices are down • Back-to-back drought years • Feed situation isn’t great, but it is better • KY beef cow numbers declining for 2nd straight year

  4. Farmer stocking rate comments “If I sell some cows, what do I do with all this grass?” “Add more cows, are you crazy? I barely survive the summers now!” “I’ve got a lot more money running 50 cows, than 30”

  5. What is a stocking rate? • Total farm acres / # of beef cows • Probably understates stocking rate • Pasture acres + hay acres / # of beef cows • I can work with this one, but want to talk it through • Pasture acres / # of beef cows • I like this one, and then talk about winter feeding program

  6. 2008 Beef Budgets • Updated, improved, and available • Changes made to hay, pasture, and overhead cost areas • Hay charged at production cost • Pasture maintenance vs. stocking rate • Depreciation and operator labor lowered • We re-thought the heifer development • Numbers are different to avoid double-counting

  7. Beef Budgets and Stocking Rates • Budgets should be the starting place for most any profitability discussion • Walk through each item in the budget and think about which ones change with stocking rate • Consider the total change per cow, per acre, and for the whole farm

  8. If we decrease stocking rate… • Pasture maintenance costs per cow should increase • All our overhead costs will go up • Depreciation on buildings and machinery • Taxes and insurance • Breeding (depends on bull battery) • Land charges

  9. If we decrease stocking rate… • Feed costs per cow should go down • Fewer cattle on same acreage should lead to decreasing non-pasture feed needs • Breeding costs will only come down if we reduce bull numbers • Labor costs per cow are questionable *Also is a potential productivity effect

  10. A typical producer • Runs 50 cows on 75 acres • Feeds hay 130 days per year • Weans 500 lb calves at an 85% rate • Variable costs per cow are about $475

  11. Pasture Maintenance per Cow Let’s say pasture maintenance costs are $75 per acre @ 1.75 acres per cow-calf unit - $131.25 @ 1.5 acres per cow-calf unit - $112.50 By reducing cow numbers, we increase our pasture costs per cow by $18.75

  12. A Simple Look at Grazing Days • 4 tons per acre fertilized forage production • 50% forage utilization – 4,000 lbs of available forage per cow • 1.5 acres per cow-calf unit • 6,000 lbs / 25 lbs per day = 240 grazing days • 1.75 acres per cow-calf unit • 7,000 lbs / 25 lbs per day = 280 grazing days • 1,000 lbs of additional forage

  13. Decrease in feed costs • 1,000 lbs of forage per cow is about 40 days worth • Due to seasonality, we may only get about 2/3 this directly • @ $85 per ton of hay, we’re saving about $1.25 each day • Decreased feed costs - $33

  14. Is this a good move… • On a cash basis, probably so • However, if land is not paid for or if overhead costs are high, this could be trouble • This is where fixed costs become important

  15. Overhead Costs • Taxes and insurance, likely small effect • Equipment depreciation – allocate appropriately between hay and cows • Building depreciation - WILL GET YOU!! • Land charges Question becomes, will overhead eat this benefit?

  16. How to handle land… • Interest on land’s market value? • Interest on land’s agricultural value? • Appropriate rental rate? • Zero, since they never intend to sell it? Our budgets bottom line is usually a return to land and management – let the farmer make the call

  17. Producer A • Runs 50 cows on 75 pasture acres • Feeds hay 140 days per year • Uses very used equipment and is an excellent mechanic • Land is paid for and son and daughter are very active on the farm

  18. Producer B • Runs 75 cows on 250 acres • Feeds hay 120 days out of the year • Expanded the cow herd in 2005 by buying 35 more cows and purchasing the adjoining 110 acres • Recently upgraded a lot of his farm equipment • He’s a good farmer, but he’s struggling

  19. Thinking it through… • If costs are around $450 per cow and you wean 550# calves for $100 per cwt. • Income per calf is $550 @ 90% calf crop = $495 • How much money is left to pay for those cows and land? This really brings us back to those budgets!!

  20. Running cows with overhead • For farmers who want to run cows, they can and will if they cover cash costs • They want to cover a portion of overhead costs • Land appreciation will increase net worth • Taxes can skew the way we look at things versus farmers

  21. Trimming Cow Numbers Makes Sense if… • Low overhead costs, land is paid for, but pretty high cash production costs • Forage is comfortable in a good year, but tight in a normal year • They could make some improvements in grazing program

  22. Culling Candidates • Open cows should already be gone • Poor producers next • Then, go to production records and work from the bottom up • Work through weaning weights and compare to production costs • Larger cows had better be weaning proportionally larger calves

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