Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) live cattle futures rose on Monday for the sixth time in seven sessions, holding near contract highs posted last week on tight US cattle inventories and strong demand for beef, Reuters reported, citing analysts.
Cattle futures drew additional support from an equities market rebound on Monday after a Wall Street selloff at the end of last week. A stronger stock market tends to support demand for higher priced proteins like beef.
"That risk-off mindset from Friday was kind of a one-off. Cattle held up pretty good against that, but I think the stock market coming back around in force today probably helped with the short covering in cattle, extending that price recovery action," said Mike Zuzolo, president of Global Commodity Analytics.
News headlines from US meatpacker Tyson Foods also fuelled buying in cattle futures at times, he said.