The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s January and July Cattle Inventory reports, released toward the end of each respective month, provide the total inventory of beef cows, milk cows, bulls, replacement heifers, other steers and heifers, and the calf crop for the current year. With drought and high input costs compelling farmers to market a greater-than-normal percentage of female cattle, the most recent cattle inventory decreased to numbers not seen in decades. Market Intel will provide analysis of the Jan. 1 inventory, which will set the tone for cattle markets in 2024.
It is a bullish report. All cattle and calves on Jan. 1, 2024, in the United States were at 87.2 million head, which is two percent less than in 2023. That is the lowest Jan. 1 inventory since USDA’s 82.08 million estimate in 1951. The calf crop is estimated at 33.6 million head, which is two percent less from this past year and the smallest calf crop since 33.1 million in 1948.
To understand the implications of that report the individual inventories, including all beef cattle and beef heifers for replacement, need to be broken down. The inventory of all U.S. beef cattle on Jan. 1, 2024, was 28.2 million head, which is a decrease of two percent, or 700,000 head, from Jan. 1, 2023. The 2024 decline follows a four percent decrease in the beef herd inventory from 2022 to 2023. That is the smallest U.S. beef herd since 1951.
Heifers kept as beef cow replacements were estimated at 4.86 million head, which is a decrease of one percent from 2023. While the inventory of beef cattle is lesser, that is a small year-over-year decline in replacement heifers compared to the six percent decline in 2022 and may be an indicator that the contraction phase of the cattle cycle is beginning to slow.