Shrinking cattle supplies continues to be the story in the cattle market and part of the reason cattle prices continue to climb. USDA’s annual Cattle Inventory Report released Friday shows the U.S. cattle inventory shrunk another 1% over the past year, now at 86.7 million head. And when you look at just the number of beef cows, that inventory fell 1%, now sitting at 27.9 million head.
Other highlights in the January Cattle report include:
- Of the 86.7 million head inventory of all cattle and calves, cows and heifers that have calved totaled 37.2 million
- The number of milk cows in the U.S. increased slightly to 9.35 million.
- U.S. calf crop was estimated at 33.5 million head, down slightly from previous year.
- USDA NASS says the number of cattle on feed were at 14.3 million head, down 1% from 2024
All 👀 were on the January #cattle report today. Here's a look at the #beef cattle inventory over the last 65 years 🥩 . 🇺🇸 Jan inventory was the lowest since 1961 👇👇. At @TerrainAg we have amazing protein economists on the team to help #FarmCredit customers, see their work… pic.twitter.com/weg8KrjcbW
— John Newton (@New10_AgEcon) January 31, 2025
“The big takeaway as we see it was the notable upward revision of last year’s numbers, and we expected that. The past year’s kills have simply been larger than implied by last year’s survey. I think most in the market anticipated that. Not sure if the Algo traders had,” says Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist with StoneX Group.
“Everything looks pretty in line until you get to that beef replacement heifer number, and I feel like that’s kind of a little bit of a surprise as we’ve been talking about heifer retention,” Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek, Sioux Center, Iowa told AgDay’s Michelle Rook. “We’re thinking it’s happening and the last cattle on feed report showed a few less heifers on feed but with a 101 % estimate coming in at 99% we’re still off of year ago levels and still not seeing that rebuild in the cow herd.”
Last year’s USDA Cattle Inventory Report showed the smallest cattle herd in 73 years. And with no strong signs of rebuilding underway, along with strong prices providing no incentive to retain heifers, agricultural economists expected U.S. cattle inventory to shrink even more since last year, which is exactly what USDA revealed on Friday.
“The next takeaway is that we have not started rebuilding the breeding herd. As such, perhaps we have a little higher numbers over the next half year or so, but then things get tighter, and more significantly tighter once we actually do start holding back heifers,” says Suderman.
Higher Highs?
Cattle prices continued to hit records this week. And with no signs of those record prices slowing down, it’s a question of how high these prices will actually go.
According to AgDay’s Michelle Rook, the cattle market continues to smash new records in both the futures market and in cash cattle trade. She reported a strong fed cash cattle market, combined with the border still being closed to Mexican feeder imports has also pushed both live and cattle futures to all-time highs.
Is there any sign of a slowdown in the market, or is a top close? Suderman says fundamentally, the signs show supplies are tight, but the demand piece is a concern.
“Unfortunately, those signs usually come after the top has traded, which is why so many feeders are so nervous,” he says. “Fundamentally, things will still get tighter. But it still comes to the consumer. Consumer confidence pulled back in January, which is a red flag. Headlines are filled with scary scenarios that a trade war over tariffs could bring, which tends to further reduce consumer confidence. That doesn’t bode well for the consumer paying up for the higher cuts of meat at these price levels.”
What Will It Take for Producers to Start to Rebuild?
What would change a producer’s minds and give them confidence to grow their herds again? That’s exactly what we asked in the latest Ag Economists’ Monthly Monitor, which is an anonymous survey of nearly 70 ag economists from across the country. While some said it will just take time, others pointed to the economics of strong cow-calf returns, weaker fed cattle prices and lower prices at the sale barn.
Other economists said:
- “Today’s high prices are certainly incentive, along with the expectation of moderate feed costs.”
- “Government policies, global demand, price cycle”
- “Better spring forage supplies could be the most important factor in growth. More quality labor could be critical, too.”
- “Confidence that the general economy outlook is positive and that there are unlikely to be negative policy shocks. And, of course, there has to be adequate forage.”
- “Improved weather pattern in the West, along with profitable margins.”


