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Yon Angus cow

Making the most of it

You can’t buy Certified Angus Beef ® brand leather. We don’t have a line of CAB dogfood (that’s not to say we haven’t been approached about creating one, but it’s clearly not our market).

Yet, in order to turn a profit a packer needs to market the entire animal.

Only a percentage of this animal will be sold as Certified Angus Beef.
Only a percentage of this animal will be sold as Certified Angus Beef.

So when a finished steer or heifer meets the CAB specifications, it’s a given: not all of it will be sold with our brand attached. The amount of that qualifying carcass sold as CAB is called our “carcass utilization” and that’s a number we like to keep our eye on.

Just as feeders measure average daily gain and feed-to-gain ratios, we consider that a measure of efficiency or “how much we’re getting done with each animal,” says Clint Walenciak, CAB director of packing.

It’s something we watch closely, but it’s not just important to us. It matters to you.

“Higher carcass utilization means the packer was able to capture a premium on more pounds of meat,” Clint says. “The more premiums they can capture, the more aggressive they can be in procuring these kind of cattle.”

If you hear “more aggressive” and take that to mean “the more they can afford to pay,” you’d be right.

Increasing the carcass utilization helps increase the topline of that equation.

“The more pounds per head the packer can get a premium on, that takes the burden off middle meats to carry the value,” Clint says.

The first half of our fiscal year shows our carcass utilization is at 258 lb., down 5 lb. from last year. And we’re happy about that.

Let me repeat, we’re happy that our carcass utilization is down 5 lb. from last year. Why?

“An increase in supply, in the short-term, hurts that number,” he says, explaining that you can’t just turn on the switch and sell the extra product immediately.

So as our CAB acceptance has climbed, even hitting a record high 29% of all A-stamped carcasses some weeks, that number has only dropped 5 lb. (Woohoo!)

Compare that to some years in our recent history like 2008 or 2009, when we had 10 to 15% jumps in certified numbers, but only single-digit sales increases.

“We were still blowing the doors off on sales, but we couldn’t stay caught up with those cattle,” Clint says. “Those two numbers in these past two years have gotten much more aligned.”

That’s not just good news in the near term, but it also supports our “build it and they will come” mantra: Produce it and our licensees will get it sold.

And at a premium, I might add.

May your bottom line be filled with black ink,

Miranda

PS–To read more about how we encourage higher carcass utilization, check out “Down 5 million cows, now what?” in the Angus Beef Bulletin.

 

 

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