December 8, 2017 CapitalPress.com Farm Market Report S PONSORED BY ROP-49-4-1/106 For the latest market reports from around the region, go to www.capitalpress.com/markets. 13 Hay Market Reports Potato Market Reports Compiled by USDA Market News Service • St. Joseph, Mo.-Portland Hay prices are dollars per ton or dollars per bale when sold to retail outlets. Basis is current delivery FOB barn or stack, or deliv- ered customer as indicated. Grade guidelines used in this report have the following relationship to Relative Feed Value (RFV), Acid Detergent Fiber (ADF), TDN (Total Digestible Nutrients), or Crude Protein (CP) test numbers: GRADE RFV ADF TDN CP SUPREME 185+ <27 55.9+ 22+ PREMIUM 170-185 27-29 54.5-55.9 20-22 GOOD 150-170 29-32 52.5-54.5 18-20 FAIR 130-150 32-35 50.5-52.5 16-18 UTILITY <130 36+ <50.5 <16 Note: Due to the Thanksgiving holiday this report will not be issued again until Dec. 1. WASHINGTON-OREGON HAY (Columbia Basin) (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 This week FOB Last week Last year 1020 Tons Holiday 1000 Tons Compared to Nov. 17: Fair/Good Alfalfa steady in a light test. Trade slow this week. Demand remains good for all grades of Al- falfa. Increased demand for feeder hay was noted this week also. Retail/Feedstore not tested this week. All prices are dollars per ton and FOB the farm or ranch unless otherwise stated. Tons Price Alfalfa Mid Square Good Tarped 400 155.00 Fair Export 320 132.00 Alfalfa Small Square Premium Export 300 198.00 OREGON AREA HAY (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 Compared to Nov. 17: Prices trended generally steady in a limited test. Retail/Stable type hay remains the largest demanded hay. Many hay producers have sold out for the year. Recent and upcoming holidays have and will continue to slow movement. This week FOB Last week Last year 1453 Tons Holiday 4554 Tons CROOK, DESCHUTES, JEFFERSON, WASCO COUNTIES Tons Price Alfalfa Small Square Prem Retail/Stable 15 200.00 Orchard Grass Small Square Prem Retail/Stable 17 250.00 Meadow Grass Mixed Grass 5-Way Eastern Oregon: Alfalfa Timothy Grass Harney County: Alfalfa Klamath Basin: Alfalfa Good/Premium Small Square Prem Retail/Stable Small Square Prem Retail/Stable Small Square Prem Retail/Stable Large Square Good/Premium Large Square Good Rain Damage 45 225.00 25 210.00 20 275.00 50 170.00 30 170.00 101 130.00 Large Square Supreme 50 Prem/Supr/Org/Dam 200 Mid Square Premium/Supreme 700 225.00 185.00 210.00 Lake County: Alfalfa Small Square Good/Premium 120 185.00 Alfalfa/Grass Mix Large Square Good 30 130.00 Oat Small Square Good/Premium 50 125.00 IDAHO HAY (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 This week FOB Last week Last year 3100 Tons Holiday 2900 Tons Compared to Nov. 17: Alfalfa steady. Trade slow with good de- mand especially for higher testing Alfalfa to California interests. Most trading this week took place on the eastern part of the state. Retail/Feedstore not tested. Tons Price Alfalfa Mid Square Prem/Supr/Tarped 1200 145.83 Good Tarped 1500 130.00 Fair 100 90.00 Tarped 300 90.00 CALIFORNIA HAY (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 Compared to Nov. 17: All classes traded steady with moderate demand. Recent rains have encouraged the emergence of winter grains and silage crops and they were growing well. Early plant- ings of small grains showed good emergence. Growers continued to prepare more fields for fall planting of wheat, barley, and oats. Silage corn grew well and harvesting was ongoing. Cotton fields were defoliated and harvesting was in full swing. This week FOB Last week Last year 3125 Tons Holiday 3015 Tons REGION 1: NORTHERN INTERMOUNTAIN Includes the counties of Siskiyou, Modoc, Shasta, Lassen and Plumas. Tons Price Brome Grass Prem/Retail/Stable 75 180.00 REGION 2: SACRAMENTO VALLEY Includes the counties of Tehama, Glenn, Butte, Colusa, Sutter, Yuba, Sierra, Nevada, Placer, Yolo, El Dorado, Solano and Sac- ramento. Alfalfa Prem/Retail/Stable 25 280.00 REGION 3: NORTHERN SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY Includes the counties of San Joaquin, Calaveras, Stanislaus, Tuolumne, Mono, Merced and Mariposa. Alfalfa Prem/Ret/Stab/Del 100 270.00 Good/Del 200 260.00 Fair/Del 235 200.96 Brome Grass Prem/Del/Ret/Stable 75 240.00 REGION 4: CENTRAL SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY Includes the counties of Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare and Inyo. Alfalfa Util/Del/Ret/Stable 200 245.00 REGION 5: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Includes the counties of Kern, Northeast Los Angeles and West- ern San Bernardino Alfalfa Supr 50 230.00 REGION 6: SOUTHEAST CALIFORNIA Includes the counties of Eastern San Bernardino, Riverside and Imperial. Alfalfa Premium/Supreme Premium Export Retail/Stable Good Export 250 600 200 275 120 720 208.80 186.08 198.00 183.64 165.00 180.00 Grain Market Reports Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Portland Grains are stated in dollars per bushel or hundredweight (cwt.) except feed grains traded in dollars per ton. National grain report bids are for rail delivery unless truck indicated. PORTLAND GRAIN (USDA Market News) Portland Nov. 30 Pacific Northwest Market Summary: Cash wheat bids for December delivery ended the reporting week on Thursday, Nov. 30, were mixed compared to week ago noon bids for December delivery. March wheat futures ended the reporting week on Thursday, Nov. 30, lower as follows compared to week ago closes: Chicago wheat futures were 7.75 cents lower at 4.33, Kansas City wheat futures were seven cents lower at 4.3150 and Minneapolis wheat futures trended 19.50 cents lower at 6.2175. Chicago December corn futures trended 3.50 cents lower at 3.4175 and January soybean futures closed 11.50 cents lower at 9.8575. Bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat delivered to Portland in unit trains or barges during December for ordinary protein trended 4.75 to 15 cents per bushel lower compared to week ago prices for the same delivery period from 5.13-5.20. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. White club wheat premiums were zero to five cents per bushel over soft white wheat bids this week and last week. One year ago bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat any protein for Decem- ber delivery by unit trains and barges to Portland were 4.4775-4.75 and bids for White Club Wheat were 4.6275-4.87. Forward month bids for soft white wheat ordinary protein were as follows: January 5.21-5.25, February 5.22-5.25, March 5.24-5.25 and April 5.25. One year ago, forward month bids for soft white wheat for any protein were as follows: January and February 4.4775-4.80, March 4.6275- 4.80, and April 4.5050-4.85. Bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat guaranteed maximum 10.5 percent protein during December trended 4.75 to 15 cents per bushel lower than week ago prices for the same delivery period from 5.13-5.20. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. White club wheat premiums for guaranteed maximum 10.5 percent protein soft white wheat this week were zero to five cents per bushel over soft white wheat bids this week and last week. One year ago bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat guaranteed maximum 10.5 percent protein for December delivery by unit trains and barges to Portland were 4.5275-4.75 and bids for White Club Wheat were 4.6275- 4.7775. Forward month bids for soft white wheat guaranteed 10.5 percent proteins were as follows: January 5.21-5.25, February 5.22-5.25 and March 5.24-5.25. One year ago, forward month bids for soft white wheat for any protein were as follows: January, February and March 4.5275-4.80 and April 4.5050-4.85. Bids for 11.5 percent protein US 1 Hard Red Winter Wheat for De- cember delivery trended 5.50 to 13.50 cents per bushel higher than week ago bids for the same delivery period. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery This week, bids were as follows: December 5.7450-5.9150, January and February 5.7650-5.8650 and March 5.8150-5.8650. Bids for non-guaranteed 14.0 percent protein US 1 Dark Northern Spring Wheat for Portland delivery during December trended 15 to 20 cents per bushel lower than week ago bids for the same delivery period. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. This week, bids for non-guaranteed 14 percent protein were as follows: December 7.2175-7.4175, January, February and March 7.3675-7.5675. Coarse feeding grains: Bids for US 2 Yellow Corn delivered full coast Pacific Northwest-BN shuttle trains for December delivery trended 3.50 to 7.50 cents lower than week ago offers for the same delivery period from 4.1775-4.2675. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. Forward month corn bids were as follows: January 4.3075- 4.4075, February and March 4.3275-4.4075 and April 4.2975-4.4175. Bids for US 1 Yellow Soybeans delivered full coast Pacific North- west-BN shuttle trains for November delivery trended 7.50 to 11.50 cents lower than week ago bids for the same delivery period from 10.6275-10.6775. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby de- livery. Forward month soybean bids were as follows: January 10.6275- 10.6575, and February 10.6175-10.6975. Bids for US 2 Heavy White Oats for November delivery trended steady at 3.12 per bushel. Compiled by North American Potato Market News and USDA Agricultural Market Service Prices are weekly averages of daily prices. All prices are in dollars per hundredweight (cwt.). FWA is a weighted average of shipping point prices or common packs in each area. Weights differ by area. GRI is the Grower Returns Index for each individual area. FRESH RUSSET POTATO MARKET REPORT (North American Potato Market News) (USDA Market News) Dec. 2 Shipping Area FWA Chg Idaho Burbanks $18.57 $0.51 Idaho Norkotahs $17.31 $0.41 San Luis Valley $17.08 $0.00 Columbia Basin $16.59 -$0.04 GRI Chg 70 ct Chg 10# Film Chg $8.81 $0.31 $25.50 $0.50 $13.50 $0.50 $8.95 $0.31 $23.50 $0.50 $13.00 $0.50 $10.01 $0.00 $22.00 $0.00 $15.00 $0.00 $7.73 -$0.02 $20.00 $0.00 $12.00 $0.00 Sheep/Wool Market Reports Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Greeley, Colo.-San Angelo, Texas Wool prices in cents per pound and foreign currency per kilogram, sheep prices in dollars per hundredweight (cwt.) except some replacement animals on per head basis as indicated. NATIONAL WOOL REVIEW (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 Domestic wool trading on a clean basis was at a standstill this week. There were no con- firmed trades reported. Domestic wool trading on a greasy basis was at a standstill this week. There were no confirmed trades reported. NATIONAL SHEEP SUMMARY (USDA Market News) San Angelo, Texas Dec. 1 Compared to last week: Slaughter lambs under 70 lbs were steady to 10.00 higher; heavier weights were steady to 10.00 lower. Slaughter ewes were steady to 5.00 higher. No comparison on feeder lambs. At San An- gelo, Texas, 5835 head sold. Equity Electron- ic Auction sold 320 slaughter lambs in North Dakota. In direct trading slaughter ewes and feeder lambs were not tested. 5800 head of negotiated sales of slaughter lambs were 2.00-4.00 lower. 2,848 lamb carcasses sold with all weights no trend due to confidential- ity. All sheep sold per hundred weight unless otherwise specified. Slaughter Lambs: Choice and Prime 2-3 90-160 lbs: San Angelo: Shorn and wooled 100-135 lbs 124.00-138.00, few 142.00. Ft. Collins, Colo.: wooled 125 lbs 157.50. South Dakota: Shorn and wooled 115- 150 lbs 123.00-129.00; wooled 130-145 lbs 119.00-120.00. Billings, Mont.: No test. Missouri: Wooled 110-155 lbs 113.00- 131.00. Equity Elec: Shorn 150 lbs 119.25. Slaughter Lambs: Choice and Prime 1-2: San Angelo: 40-60 lbs 240.00-268.00, few 270.00-284.00; 60-70 lbs 210.00-238.00, few 240.00-250.00; 70-80 lbs 188.00-210.00, few 218.00; 80-90 lbs 180.00-196.00; 90-110 lbs 160.00-178.00. Ft. Collins: 41 lbs 202.50; 51 lbs 220.00; 60-70 lbs 215.50-220.00. California Egg Reports Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Des Moines Shell egg marketer’s benchmark price for negotiated egg sales of USDA Grade A and Grade AA in cartons, cents per dozen. This price does not reflect discounts or other contract terms. DAILY CALIFORNIA SHELL EGGS (USDA Market News) Dec. 1 Benchmark prices are unchanged. Asking prices for next week are unchanged on all sizes. The undertone is steady to cautiously steady. Demand into retail channels is in a full range of light to good as some are seeing lackluster movement after the holiday and others are building inventories due to upcoming feature activity. Food service demand is light to moderate. Warehouse buyers are purchasing mostly for immediate needs and watching the market very closely. Offerings and supplies are light to moderate. Market activity is slow to moderate. Small benchmark price $1.48. Size Range Size Range Jumbo 194 Extra large 236 Large 235 Medium 168 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Prices to retailers, sales to volume buyers, USDA Grade AA and Grade AA, white eggs in cartons, delivered store door. Size Range Size Range Jumbo 181-194 Extra large 222-226 Large 220-228 Medium 149-160 Cattle Market Reports Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Oklahoma City-Des Moines-St. Joseph, Mo.-Moses Lake, Wash. NATIONAL FEEDER AND STOCKER CATTLE (Federal-State Market News) St. Joseph, Mo. Dec. 1 This week Last week Last year 306,100 101,900 338,400 Compared to last week: Steers and heifers traded steady to 5.00 higher as most auctions were filled with spring calves making their way to town for the first time. Most mid-week auctions were in fact looking back two weeks ago due to the Thanksgiving holiday and they had some catching up to do as receipts were large. Demand was good to very good for all classes of cattle this week even with many calves coming through the ring right off the cow. Farmers are finishing up harvest as corn harvest- ed was reported at 95 percent as of Nov. 26. With the unseasonably warm and dry weather across the country this week, expect that number to get even closer to completion. Farmers in the Plains states are pretty much done, however, Indiana, Ohio and Michigan are the states lagging behind the most. Some farmers can now turn their attention to their livestock enterprise. If they still have fences coupled with corn and wheat having bleak outlooks on P&L statements, farmers have shown up to sale barns from the Southern Plains to the Northern Plains this week. Several calf specials are on the calendars for this three-week rush before the Christmas holiday. Fed cattle harvests have been aggressive this summer and fall as both international and domestic demand for beef have only fueled the packer profitability for over six months now. Feedyards continue to market cattle in a timely fashion to keep the front-end current supply in check. December Live cattle futures have been ho-hum the past couple weeks to close today at 117.23, 1.34 lower than last Friday’s close. Feeder Cattle futures lost some momentum a couple weeks ago and have recovered to close today at 150.33, 2.97 lower than a week ago. Livestock Auctions California TURLOCK (Turlock Livestock Auction Yard) Nov. 28 Receipts: 1506 HD. Comment: Larger penlots steady compared to a week ago. Smaller lots and singles were the bulk of the sale. Weigh cows and bulls 2-3 cents lower with heavier cow volume in the northwest and central states. No. 1 Med. & Large Frame Steers: 400-499 lbs. $168.00-184.00; 500-599 lbs. $150.00-171.50; 600-699 lbs. $140.00-161.25; 700-799 lbs. $128.00-146.50; 800- 899 lbs. NT No. 2 Med. & Large Frame Steers: 300-399 lbs. $100.00-190.00; 400-499 lbs. $120.00-167.00; 500-599 lbs. $110.00-149.00; 600-699 lbs. $95.00-139.00; 700- 799 lbs. $90.00-127.00; 800-899 lbs. $75.00-119.00 No. 1 Med. & Large Frame Heifers: 400-499 lbs. $138.00-160.00; 500-599 lbs. $133.00-152.50; 600-699 lbs. $126.00-145.25; 700-799 lbs. $125.00-135.00; 800- 899 lbs. NT No. 2 Med. & Large Frame Heifers: 300-399 lbs. $110.00-160.00; 400-499 lbs. $115.00-137.00; 500-599 lbs. $110.00-132.00; 600-699 lbs. $100.00-125.00; 700- 799 lbs. $95.00-124.00; 800-899 lbs. $92.00-111.00 No. 1 Holstein Steers: 300-399 lbs. $80.00-115.00; 400-499 lbs. $80.00-112.00; 500-599 lbs. $75.00- 102.00; 600-699 lbs. $75.00-99.00; 700-799 lbs. $65.00-98.00; 800-899 lbs. $60.00-97.50; 900-999 lbs. $60.00-95.50 Holstein Barren Heifers: $65.00-94.00 Weigh Beef Cows: High Yielding $60.00 $65.50; Med Yielding $53.00 $59.00; Low Yielding $40.00 $52.00 Weigh Dairy Cows: High Yielding $58.00 $66.00; Med Yielding $52.00 $57.00; Low Yielding $35.00 $51.00 Weigh Bulls: High Yielding $80.00 $85.00; Med Yield- ing $73.00 $79.00; Low Yielding $58.00 $72.00 Washington TOPPENISH (Toppenish Livestock Auction) Nov. 30 Receipts: 2550 Compared to two weeks ago: Thursday at the same sale, stocker and feeder cattle steady to 5.00 higher as local feed yards pursue numbers in spite of a lower fu- tures market yesterday. Trade active with good demand. Slaughter cows and bulls 1.00-5.00 higher. Trade active with good demand. Slaughter cows 59 percent, slaugh- ter bulls 10 percent, and feeders 31 percent of the sup- ply. The feeder supply included 62 percent steers and 38 percent heifers. Near 42 percent of the run weighed over 600 lbs. Feeder Steers: Medium and Large 1-2: 400-500 lbs 153.00-164.00; 500-600 lbs 153.00-162.50; 600-700 lbs 146.50-155.00, Calves; 600-700 lbs 144.00, Full; 700- 800 lbs 148.50-154.00. Small and Medium 1-2: 500-600 lbs 148.00. Feeder Holstein Steers: Medium and Large 2-3: 300- 400 lbs 85.00. Feeder Heifers: Medium and Large 1-2: 300-400 lbs 146.00; 400-500 lbs 140.50-149.00; 500-600 lbs 135.00- 146.00; 500-600 lbs 152.50, Thin Fleshed; 600-700 lbs 139.00-149.75, Calves; 700-800 lbs 126.75; 800-900 lbs 124.50. Large 1: 900-1000 lbs 114.50-119.75. Small and Medium 1-2: 300-400 lbs 139.00; 400-500 lbs 134.00- 142.00; 500-600 lbs 117.50, Full. Slaughter Cows: Boners: 80-85 Pct. Lean, 1300-2000 lbs, Avg Dress- ing 60.00-65.00, Low Dressing 55.00-60.00 Lean: 85-90 Pct. Lean, 1200-1950 lbs, Avg Dressing 59.00-65.00, Low Dressing 54.00-59.00 Lean: 90 Pct. Lean, 900-1400 lbs, Avg Dressing 50.00-54.00, Low Dressing 45.00-50.00 Slaughter Bulls: Yield Grade 1-2: 1300-2400 lbs, Avg Dressing 74.00- 80.00, High Dressing 82.50-86.50, Low Dressing 65.00- 74.00 Bred Cows (Per Head): Medium and Large 1-2: Bro- ken Mouth 1323 lbs. 750.00 6-9 mos. Please Note: The USDA LPGMN price report is re- flective of the majority of classes and grades of livestock offered for sale. There may be instances where some sales do not fit within reporting guidelines and therefore will not be included in the report. Idaho Jerome (Producers Livestock Marketing Association) Nov. 28 Holstein Bull Cfs: $30-70 HD Holstein Hfr Cfs: N/T Started Bull & Str Cfs: $110- $210 HD Started Hfr Cfs: $110-200 HD Brk/Ut/Com Cows: $58-68 Cut/Bon Cows: $52-59 Shelly/Lite Cows: $40-53 Slaughter Bulls: $69-76.50 Heiferettes: N/T Holstein Strs 275-400 lbs N/T; 400-500 lbs N/T; 500- 600 lbs (535-90) N/T; 600-700 lbs: N/T; 700-800 lbs (745-85)(720-95)(707-90) $85-95; Holstein Strs 800- 1000 (878-88)(1218-79.50) $75-88 Holstein Hfrs: 275-999 lbs (964-79)(904-70)(940- 85.50)(964-82)(903-80)(997-87.50) $70-87.50; 1000 lbs (1016-88)(1218-79.50) $79.50-88 Choice Strs: 300-400 lbs: N/T; 400-500 lbs: N/T; 500- 600 lbs (509-164)(582-152)(512-153) $152-164; 600- 700 lbs (630-155.50)(611-144.25)(687-141.50) $141.50- 144.25; 700-800 lbs (735-151) $134-151; 800-1000 lbs (830-134)(902-146.50) (1051-125)(1110-110) $134-151 Choice Hfrs: 300-400 lbs: N/T; 400-500 lbs (420- 154.50)(443-156) $154-156; 500-600 lbs (512-153.50) (589-145)(539-143)(583-141.75)(561-139.75) $139- 153.50; 600-700 lbs (611-144.25)(687-141.50) $141- 144.25; Choice Hfrs 700-800 lbs: N/T; 800-1000 lbs (918-137.50) (1173-107) $107-137.50 Stock Cow: N/T Oregon LEBANON (Lebanon Auction Yard) Nov. 30 Total receipts: 401 Butcher Cows: Conventional: Top Cow, $68.50; Top 10 Cows, $65.75; Top 50 Cows, $62.38; Avg. All Cows, $54.75; Organic: Top Cow, $85.00; Top 10, $76.62; Avg. All Organic: $62.00. Bulls: Conventional: Top Bull, $85.00; Avg. All Bulls, $76.68. WOODBURN (Woodburn Livestock Exchange) Nov. 28 Receipts: 527, 522 Cattle Top 10 Slaughter Cows A/P: 63.06 cwt Top 50 Slaughter Cows A/P: 60.13 cwt Top 100 Slaughter Cows A/P: 57.99 cwt Back-The Country Cows: 70.00 cwt Certified Cows: 80.00-140.00 cwt Top Certified Organic Cattle: 40.00-60.00 cwt All Slaughter Bulls: 40.00-80.00 cwt Top Beef Steers: 200-300 lbs 145.00-165.00 cwt; 300-400 lbs 135.00-146.00 cwt; 400-500 lbs 135.00- 142.00 cwt; 500-600 lbs 130.00-136.00 cwt; 600-700 lbs 115.00-128.00 cwt; 700-800 lbs 100.00-114.00 cwt; 800-900 lbs NT cwt Top Beef Heifers: 200-300 lbs NT; 300-400 lbs 130.00- 140.00 cwt; 400-500 lbs 125.00-137.50 cwt; 500-600 lbs 120.00-131.00 cwt; 600-700 lbs 100.00-118.50 cwt; 700-800 lbs 100.00-111.00 cwt; 800-900 lbs 90.00- 110.00 cwt Cow/Calf Pairs: NT Bred Cows: 475.00-830.00 HD Day Old Beef Cross Calves: NT Day Old Dairy Calves: 8.00-77.50 HD Block Hogs: 72.00-80.00 cwt Feeder Pigs: 75.00-80.00 HD Sows: 20.00-40.00 cwt Weaner Pigs: 18.00-23.00 HD Sheep: Lambs 40-70 lbs 145.00-185.00 cwt; Lambs 75-150 lbs 177.50-202.00 cwt Thin Ewes: 55.00-101.00 cwt Fleshy Ewes: 60.00-95.00 cwt Ewe/Lamb Pairs: NT Goats: 10-39 lbs 27.50-35.00 HD; 40-69 lbs 40.00- 152.50 HD; 70-79 lbs 80.00-152.50 HD; 80-89 lbs 90.00- 167.50 HD; 90-99 lbs 95.00-167.50 HD; 100-199 lbs 100.00-210.00 HD; 200-300 lbs 75.00-205.00 HD EUGENE (Eugene Livestock Auction) Dec. 2 Head Cnt: 431 Market Conditions Compared to Last Week: Cows and bulls steady; feeder cattle steady. High Dressers: 60.00-68.50 Top 10 Cows 63.40 Low Dressers: 50.00-59.50 Bulls: Top Bulls High Dressers: 68.50-75.50 Feeder Bulls: 300-500 lbs 97.00-140.00; 500-700 lbs 62.00-136.50; 700-900 lbs: 60.00-120.00 Choice Steers Medium-Large Frame No.1 & 2s: Feeder Steers: 300-400 lbs 133.00-140.00; 400-500 lbs 130.00-147.50; 500-600 lbs 120.00-143.00; 600-700 lbs 120.00-135.00; 700-800 lbs 110.00-125.50; 800-900 lbs 109.00-124.00 Choice Heifers Medium-Large Frame # 1 & 2’S: Feeder Heifers: 300-400 lbs 105.00-129.00; 400-500 lbs 130.00-135.00; 500-600 lbs 115.00-137.00; 600-700 lbs 110.00-126.50; 700-800 lbs 100.00-116.00; 800 and up 112.00-116.00 AGFI17/101