January 26, 2018 CapitalPress.com For the latest market reports from around the region, go to www.capitalpress.com/markets. Farm Market Report 13 S PONSORED BY ROP-3-3-2/106 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 WASHINGTON-OREGON HAY (Columbia Basin) (USDA Market News) Jan. 26 This week FOB Last week Last year 1290 Tons 2625 Tons 5400 Tons Compared to Jan. 19: Alfalfa steady in a light test. Trade slow this week with light to moderate demand. Retail/Feedstore steady. Feeder hay remains in firm hands. Tons Price Alfalfa Mid Square Premium Organic 300 310.00 Fair/Good/Org 160 280.00 Tarped 800 136.88 Orchard Grass Small Square Prem/Retail/Stable 30 215.00 OREGON AREA HAY (USDA Market News) Jan. 19 Compared to Jan. 12: Prices trended generally steady in a lim- ited test. Retail/Stable type hay remains the most demanded hay. Feeder alfalfa (rain damage) sales have decreased compared to last report. Organic sales have increased compared to the past few reports. Many hay producers have sold out for the growing year. This week FOB Last week Last year 2718 Tons 1124 Tons 6031 Tons CROOK, DESCHUTES, JEFFERSON, WASCO COUNTIES Tons Price Alfalfa Large Square Premium 200 150.00 Good/Premium 120 140.00 Fair/Good 60 120.00 Orchard Grass Meadow Grass Klamath Basin: Alfalfa Wheat Small Square Premium Retail/Stable Small Square Prem/Retail/Stable Small Square Prem/Retail/Stable Large Square Supr/Organic Premium Organic Good/Organic Small Square Premium/Grassy Good/Premium Fair/Good/Rain Dam Large Square Good/Prem/Org 27 56 225.00 220.00 36 242.08 25 210.00 50 25 900 200 300.00 230.00 271.11 265.00 125 50 30 220.00 175.00 140.00 220 170.00 Lake County: Alfalfa Large Square Supreme 242 203.26 Prem/Org/Rain Dam 200 225.00 Small Square Supreme/Org 30 250.00 Prem/Retail/Stable 30 185.00 Alfalfa/Orchard Mix Small Square Premium 62 185.00 Retail/Stable 30 185.00 Eastern Oregon: No New Sales Confirmed. Harney County: No New Sales Confirmed. IDAHO HAY (USDA Market News) Jan. 19 This week FOB Last week Last year 1430 Tons 3025 Tons 3850 Tons Compared to Jan. 12: Alfalfa steady in a light test. Trade slow this week. Muddy conditions continue. Retail/Feedstore not test- ed. Prices are dollars per ton and FOB the farm or ranch unless otherwise stated. Alfalfa Mid Square Prem/Sup.Tarped 650 130.00 Good/Prem/Tarped 750 130.00 Orchard Grass Mid Square Fair/Good/Export 30 180.00 CALIFORNIA HAY (USDA Market News) Jan. 19 Compared to Jan. 12: All classes traded steady with moder- ate demand. Retail hay is in high demand due to lack of hay in barns this year. Winter forage crops, such as wheat, barley and other cereal grains and forage mixes continued to be planted and seed shipments received. Irrigation was still necessary to main- tain growth of those plantings that have germinated. Alfalfa was growing well. This week FOB Last week Last year 1320 Tons 4935 Tons 1525 Tons REGION 1: NORTHERN INTERMOUNTAIN Includes the counties of Siskiyou, Modoc, Shasta, Lassen and Plumas. Tons Price Alfalfa Supreme 75 230.00 Fair 170 160.00 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/Del/Ret/Stab 150 300.00 Fair 25 170.00 REGION 4: CENTRAL SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY Includes the counties of Madera, Fresno, Kings, Tulare and Inyo. No New Sales Confirmed. REGION 5: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Includes the counties of Kern, Northeast Los Angeles and West- ern San Bernardino. Alfalfa Prem/Ret/Stab 350 280.00 REGION 6: SOUTHEAST CALIFORNIA Includes the counties of Eastern San Bernardino, Riverside and Imperial. Alfalfa Prem/Ret/Stab 250 232.50 Good/Premium 100 207.50 Retail/Stable 75 200.00 Good Contracted 1 135.00 Bermuda Grass Prem/Ret/Stab 100 220.00 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 Jan. 18 Pacific Northwest Market Summary: Cash wheat bids for Janu- ary delivery ended the reporting week on Thursday, Jan. 18, were lower compared to week ago noon bids for January delivery. March wheat futures ended the reporting week on Thursday, January 18, lower as follows compared to week ago closes: Chi- cago wheat futures were eight cents lower at 4.2525, Kansas City wheat futures were 10.75 cents lower at 4.2950 and Minneapo- lis wheat futures trended 18.50 cents lower at 6.1050. Chicago March corn futures trended 2.75 cents higher at 3.5150 and March soybean futures closed 23 cents higher at 9.73. Bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat delivered to Portland in unit trains or barges during January for ordinary protein trended 1.25 to seven cents per bushel lower compared to week ago prices for the same delivery period from 5.20-5.32. 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 January delivery by unit trains and barges to Portland were 4.56- 4.71 and bids for White Club Wheat were 4.74-4.96. Forward month bids for soft white wheat ordinary protein were as follows: February, March, April and May 5.20-5.32. One year ago, forward month bids for soft white wheat for any protein were as follows: February 4.56-4.71, March 4.46-4.71, April and May 4.46-4.60. Bids for US 1 Soft White Wheat guaranteed maximum 10.5 per- cent protein during January trended 3.25 cents per bushel lower than week ago prices for the same delivery period from 5.20-5.30. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. White club wheat premiums for guaranteed maximum 10.5 per- cent 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 max- imum 10.5 percent protein for January delivery by unit trains and barges to Portland were 4.76 and bids for White Club Wheat were 4.76-5.01. Forward month bids for soft white wheat guaranteed 10.5 per- cent proteins were as follows: February 5.20-5.30, March 5.20- 5.3125, April and May 5.20-5.2825. One year ago, forward month bids for soft white wheat for any protein were as follows: February not available, March 4.46-4.76, April and May 4.46-4.65. Bids for 11.5 percent protein US 1 Hard Red Winter Wheat for January delivery trended 5.75 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 were as follows: January, February, March 5.7950-5.9450, April and May 5.88- 5.98. Bids for non-guaranteed 14.0 percent protein US 1 Dark North- ern Spring Wheat for Portland delivery during January trended 18.50 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: January 7.2550-7.4550, February and March 7.2550- 7.5050, April and May 7.3975-7.5975. Coarse feeding grains: Bids for US 2 Yellow Corn delivered full coast Pacific Northwest-BNSF shuttle trains for January delivery trended 4.75 to 5.75 cents higher than week ago bids for the same delivery period from 4.4650-4.4850. Some exporters were not is- suing bids for nearby delivery. Forward month corn bids were as follows: February 4.4650- 4.4950, March 4.4550-4.4850, April 4.4150-4.4650, May 4.3750- 4.3950 and June 4.3475-4.3975. Bids for US 1 Yellow Soybeans delivered full coast Pacific Northwest-BNSF shuttle trains for No- vember delivery trended 13 to 21 cents higher than week ago bids for the same delivery period at 10.58. Some exporters were not issuing bids for nearby delivery. For- ward month soybean bids were as follows: February 10.58-10.63 and March 10.55-10.61. Bids for US 2 Heavy White Oats for No- vember delivery trended steady at 3.0475 per bushel. Pacific Northwest Export News: There were 16 grain vessels in Columbia River ports on Thursday, Jan. 18, with eight docked compared to 14 last week with five docked. There were no new confirmed export sales this week from the Commodity Credit Cor- poration (CCC) of the USDA. California Weekly Grain Report Jan. 18 Paid by feed manufacturers and other users, delivered plant or receiving station. All prices are offers for prompt shipment unless otherwise stated. Dollars Per Cwt. BARLEY US No 2 (46-lbs. per bushel) FOB Solano County NA Colusa County NA Tehama County NA Rail: Any Origin - via BNSF and U.P. Los Angeles NA Stockton-Modesto- Oakdale-Turlock NA Tulare County NA Truck Petaluma-Santa Rosa NA Stockton-Modesto- Oakdale-Turlock NA Kings-Tulare- Fresno Counties 8.75 Kern County NA Colusa County NA Glenn County NA CORN US No 2 Yellow FOB Stockton-Modesto- Oakdale-Turlock NA Modesto-Oakdale-Turlock Kings-Tulare-Fresno Turlock/Tulare Rail: Single Car Units via BNSF Los Angeles-Chino Valley Stockton Truck Petaluma-Santa Rosa Stockton-Modesto- Oakdale-Turlock Kings-Tulare- Fresno Counties Glenn County Hanford County Kern County SORGHUM US No 2 Yellow (Milo) Rail Los Angeles- Chino Valley via BNSF Truck Modesto-Oakdale-Turlock Turlock County Glenn County Kings-Tulare-Fresno OATS US No 1 White (40-lbs. per bushel) Truck Los Angeles-Chino Valley US No 2 White (38-lbs. per bushel) Rail Petaluma Truck Petaluma Stockton-Modesto- Oakdale-Turlock Colusa County WHEAT US No 2 or better - Hard Red Winter (Domestic Values for Flour Milling) FOB Fresno Merced Truck (California Origin) Los Angeles 12% Protein Los Angeles 13% Protein Los Angeles 14% Protein Colusa County Rail-Truck (Out of State Origin) LA Guaranteed 12% Protein LA Guaranteed 13% Protein LA Guaranteed 14% Protein WHEAT US Durum Wheat FOB Imperial County Truck Imperial County Kern County Kings-Tulare- Fresno Counties WHEAT Any Class for Feed FOB Kings-Tulare-Fresno Counties Kern County Merced County Rail-Truck: Los Angeles-Chino Valley (11-1/2 to 12-1/2 percent protein) NA NA 1.13+H 1.16+H NA NA 1.30+H 1.30+H 8.00 NA NA 1.70+H NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA FLUID MILK AND CREAM REVIEW – WEST (USDA Market News) Jan. 18 California milk output has increased since last week. Some manufacturing plant operators say that they are getting close to the flush production levels. This week, sales into Class 1 are steady with schools’ milk needs being fulfilled. According to some market participants, a fire at one nonfat dry milk plant diverted milk intakes to Class 4 manufac- turing plants in the area. Current higher hay prices coupled with lower milk sale prices are putting more pressure on some dair- ies as they battle to make a profit. In Arizona, farm milk output is trending higher as the weather condi- tions are increasing cows’ well-being. A shut down at one local plant resulted in more milk intakes by other plants. Most dairy plants are running at full capacity and cannot afford any down time due to excess milk that needs to be taken care of as soon as possible. No milk is currently being shipped out of state for processing. Class I intakes are steady this week. Milk pooled on the Arizona Order 131 totaled 423.2 million pounds in December 2017. Class I utilization ac- counted for about 25.6 percent of producer milk. The uniform price was $15.44, down $0.58 from last month and $1.36 below one year ago. New Mexico milk production is up this week. Total Class I intakes remain higher. However, Class II and III sales declined partly due to repair/maintenance workloads in some processing plants. In addition, LEBANON (Lebanon Auction Yard) Jan. 18 Receipts: 308 Butcher Cows: Conventional: Top Cow, $62.50; Top 10 Cows, $60.71; Top 50 Cows, $57.52; Avg. All Cows, $49.32; Organic: Top Cow, $90.00; Avg. All Organic: $65.97. Bulls: Conventional: Top Bull, $78.50. Goats: $155.00-$157.50 per head. MADRAS (Central Oregon Livestock Auction) Jan. 22 Steers: 300-400 lbs $180-200; 400-500 lbs $175-185; 500-600 lbs $165-175; 600-700 lbs $150-164; 700-800 lbs $120-130; 800-900 lbs $120-130 Heifers: 300-400 lbs NT; 400-500 lbs $155-165; 500-600 lbs $145-155; 600-700 lbs $135-145; 700- 800 lbs $125-135; 800-900 lbs $115-125 Butcher Cows: Fleshy $52-58; Lean $52-58; Low Yield $42-52; Feeder $57-69; Heiferettes $85-110 Bulls: High Yield $80-89; Med Yield $70-80; Feeder NT EUGENE (Eugene Livestock Auction) Jan. 20 Receipts: 253 Compared to Last Week: Cows and Bulls Off $3- 5. Feeder cattle steady. High Dressers: 55.00-63.50 Top 10 Cows:57.10 Low Dressers: 46.00-55.00 Bulls: Top Bulls High Dressers: 64.00-74.00 Feeder Bulls: 300-500 lbs 130-155.00; 500-700 lbs: 100.00-150.00; 700-900 lbs: 75.00-143.00 Choice Steers Medium to Large Frame No. 1&2s: Feeder Steers: 300 to 400 lbs NT; 400 to 500 lbs 140.00-164.00; 500 to 600 lbs 163.00; 600 to 700 lbs 130.00-142.50; 700 to 800 lbs 120.00-134.00; 800 to 900 lbs NT Choice Heifers Medium to Large Frame No. 1&2s: Feeder Heifers: 300 to 400 lbs 130.00-150.00; 400 to 500 lbs 130.00-157.00; 500 to 600 lbs 120.00-143.00; 600 to 700 lbs 120.00; 700 to 800 lbs 110.00-128.00; 800 and Up 117.00 Bred Cows: 520-830 HD Pairs: 1100-1155 PR Head Calves (Up to 250 lbs) Beef: 305.00- 320.00 HD; Dairy: NT Feeder Lambs: 50-90 lbs NT; 90-130 lbs 155.00 WOODBURN (Woodburn Livestock Exchange) Jan. 15-16 Receipts: 779, 290 Cattle Top 10 Slaughter Cows A/P 59.30 cwt 50 Top Slaughter Cows A/P 56.83 cwt 100 Top Slaughter Cows A/P 54.50 cwt Back To The Country Cows: 70.00 cwt Certified Cows: 80.00-140.00 cwt Top Certified Organic Cattle: NT All Slaughter Bulls: 64.50-69.00 cwt Top Beef Steers 200-300 lbs 145.00-165.00 cwt; 300-400 lbs 130.00-145.00 cwt; 400-500 lbs 140.00-150.00 cwt; 500-600 lbs 140.00-146.00 cwt; 600-700 lbs Chg 70 ct Chg 10# Film Chg $8.26 -$0.04 $24.50 $0.00 $12.50 $0.00 $8.46 -$0.03 $22.50 $0.00 $12.50 $0.00 $11.53 $0.02 $26.00 $0.00 $16.00 $0.00 $7.77 $0.06 $21.00 $0.00 $12.00 $0.00 $10.88 $0.00 $29.00 $0.00 $15.50 $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 replace- ment animals on per head basis as indicated. NATIONAL WOOL REVIEW (USDA Market News) Jan. 19 Domestic wool trading on a clean basis was at a standstill this week. There were no confirmed trades reported. Domestic wool trading on a greasy basis was also at a standstill this week. There were no confirmed trades reported. NATIONAL SHEEP SUMMARY (USDA Market News) San Angelo, Texas Jan. 19 Compared to Jan. 12: Slaughter lambs mostly steady, instances sharply lower. Slaughter ewes steady to 10.00 higher. Feeder lambs not well tested. At San Angelo, Texas, 3217 head sold. No sales in Equity Electronic Auction. In direct trading slaughter ewes and feeder lambs were not tested. 3400 head of negotiated sales of slaughter lambs were steady to 5.00 higher. 2,229 lamb carcasses sold with all weights no trend due to confidentiality. All sheep sold per hundred weight (CWT) unless otherwise specified. Slaughter Lambs: Choice and Prime 2-3 90- 160 lbs: San Angelo: shorn and wooled 130-175 lbs 110.00-130.00. Ft. Collins, CO: wooled 125-130 lbs 150.00- 185.00. Billings, MT: wooled 158 lbs 151.00. Equity Elec: no sales. Slaughter Lambs: Choice and Prime 1-2: San Angelo: 40-60 lbs 260.00-276.00, few 284.00; 60-70 lbs 248.00-260.00, few 270.00; 70-80 lbs 218.00-232.00, few 242.00-252.00; 80- 90 lbs 208.00-214.00; 90-110 lbs 170.00-180.00. Ft. Collins: 70-75 lbs 210.00-220.00; 83 lbs 205.00. Billings, MT: 56 lbs 231.00; 60-70 lbs 226.00- 235.00. Direct Trading: (lambs fob with 3-4 percent shrink or equivalent) 3400: Slaughter Lambs shorn and wooled 144-175 lbs 115.50-155.51 (wtd avg 133.29). Slaughter Ewes: San Angelo: Good 3-4 (very fleshy) no test; Good 2-3 (fleshy) 70.00-75; Utility and Good 1-3 (medium flesh) 80.00-90.00, few 92.00; Utility 1-2 (thin) 72.00-78.00; Cull and Utility 1-2 (very thin) 52.00-60.00; Cull 1 (extremely thin) 50.00- 52.00. Ft. Collins: Good 3-5 (very fleshy) 67.00- 77.50; Good 2-3 (fleshy) 75.00-85.50; Utility 1-2 (thin) 50.00-62.50; Cull 1 (extremely thin) no test. Billings, MT: Good 3-4 (very fleshy) 52.00- 58.00; Good 2-3 (fleshy) 62.00-80.00; Utility 1-2 (thin) 59.00-69.00; Cull 1 66.00. S. Dakota: Good 3-4 (very fleshy) 67.00- 70.00; Good 2-3 (fleshy) 66.00-70.00; Utility 1-2 (thin) 57.00-65.00; Cull 1 no test. Feeder Lambs: Medium and Large 1-2: San Angelo: 70-90 lbs 208.00-214.00; 92 lbs 204.00. Virginia: no test. Ft. Collins: no test. Billings: 60-70 lbs 226.00-233.00; 70-80 lbs 209.00-222.50; 80-90 lbs 192.00-215.00; 90-100 lbs 183.00-200.00; 100-110 lbs 170.00-184.50; 115-120 lbs 144.00-151.00, few 174.50; 125-130 lbs 140.00-146.00. Replacement Ewes: Medium and Large 1-2: San Angelo: hair ewes and lambs 82.00- 106.00 per head; mixed age hair ewes 80-130 lbs 90.00-140.00 cwt. Ft. Collins: no test. Billings: ewe lambs 76 lbs 227.50 cwt. S.. Dakota: bred solid mouth 230.00 per head, thin 110.00 per head; exposed 140-210 lbs 60.00-68.00 cwt; hair ewes 130 lbs 90.00 cwt. Sheep and lamb slaughter under federal inspec- tion for the week to date totaled 41,000 compared to 39,000 last week and 33,000 last year. 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) Jan. 19 Benchmark prices are unchanged. Asking prices for next week are 14 cents higher for Jumbo, 25 cents higher for Extra Large, 28 cents higher for Large and 22 cents higher for Medium and Small. Trade sentiment remains sharply higher. Demand is moderate to good into all channels. Supplies are light to moderate with offerings light. Market activity is active. Small benchmark price is $1.24. Size Range Size Range Jumbo 185 Extra large 163 Large 154 Medium 144 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 172-184 Extra large 149-153 Large 139-147 Medium 125-136 NA NATIONAL FEEDER AND STOCKER CATTLE (Federal-State Market News) St. Joseph, Mo. Jan. 19 This week Last week Last year 278,500 530,300 392,000 Compared to Jan. 12: Steers and heifers trends were all over the board. Early week sales (if auctions were open due to severe cold temperatures and treacherous roads) of feed- er steers and heifers were reported steady to 8.00 lower; mid-week sales were reported 2.00 to 8.00 higher after futures rallied and Live Cattle Futures had near limit higher moves on Wednesday. Steer and heifer calves followed the same trendline for the week; steady to 6.00 lower early week and steady to 8.00 higher mid-week. Bidders and buyers flipped their buyers cards readily in those mid- to late-week auctions as they tried to keep up with the uptick in futures. With the CME closed Monday, Tuesday rolled around and the frenzy was on again. After the Feeders closed last Thursday at 143.82; it has been up from there again. The roller coaster is hopefully hitting another high and can sustain the momentum in weeks ahead. In the North Plains, heavier fleshed back- grounded cattle are plentiful; however, grass cattle and high quality replacement heifers are in high demand currently with not enough to go around for the buyers. Last week’s large supply of cattle on offer across much of the country had the bears run- ning for the woods thinking that feedyards were full and the longs would dictate the market. Anecdotes of North Plains feedyards shipping cattle to the South Plains to complete kills for this week were abuzz around the industry with feedyards willing to wait and see if prices get better later in the week. Freezing cold temperatures the past few weeks have been a concern for the wheat crop in all areas. Producers do not like to see that low of temperatures around and they are keeping watch on their fields to see how much winterkill they will incur. Dressed steer slaughter weights were report- ed at 900 for the week ending Jan. 6, 5 pounds below last year and 10 pounds below the previ- ous 5-year average. This week’s big news centered around the largest cattle feeder in the world divesting some assets and selling their U.S. feedyards to an investment firm for approximately $200 million. According to reports the current management team and agreements to supply a packer with cattle will continue. Auction volume this week included 64 percent weighing over 600 lbs and 42 percent heifers. the flow of milk. Although temperatures have been fluctuating be- tween cold and mild, dairymen are generally finding conditions to be favorable for milk production. Industry contacts say loads of milk are moving around within the region. Most loads are finding homes within the milk shed without stressing pro- cessing capacity too much. In the West, condensed skim is mainly being dried. Inventories are easily accessible to proces- sors. Western cream supplies are steady to large. Some contacts report that their stocks are manage- able while other are overwhelmed with theirs. Butter churning is strong as more cream moves to the churns. Cream multiples for all Classes vary greatly from state to state in the West. 135.00-145.00 cwt Top Beef Heifers: 200-300 lbs NT; 300-400 lbs 130.00-141.00 cwt; 400-500 lbs 130.00-140.00 cwt; 500-600 lbs 130.00-140.00 cwt; 600-700 lbs 125.00-135.00 cwt Day Old Beef Cross Calves: 250.00-300.00 HD Day Old Dairy Calves: 2.00-62.50 HD Day Old Beef Cross Calves: 250.00-300.00 HD Day Old Dairy Calves: 2.00-62.50 HD Lambs 40-70 lbs: 150.00-191.00 cwt Lambs 75-150 lbs: 160.00-193.00 cwt Thin Ewes: 58.00-172.50 cwt Fleshy Ewes: 50.00-101.00 cwt Ewe/Lamb Pairs: NT Goats: 10-39 lbs 10.00-52.52 HD; 40-69 lbs 45.00-165.00 HD; 70-79 lbs 105.00-177.50 HD; 80-89 lbs 80.00-167.50 HD; 90-99 lbs 160.00- 190.00 HD; 100-199 lbs 50.00-255.00 HD; 200- 300 lbs HD Feeder Steers: Medium and Large 1-2: 400-500 lbs 172.00; 500-600 lbs 167.00-168.00; 600-700 lbs 144.00-155.00; 700-800 lbs 147.00-150.50. Medium and Large 2-3: 700-800 lbs 99.50. Small and Medium 1-2: 500-600 lbs 144.00. Feeder Bulls: Large 2-3: 1000-1100 lbs 77.50; 1100-1200 lbs 77.50. Feeder Heifers: Medium and Large 1-2: 400-500 lbs 150.00; 600-700 lbs 141.00-144.00; 700-800 lbs 125.00. Medium and Large 2-3: 600-700 lbs 110.00. Large 2-3: 800-900 lbs 90.00, Heiferettes; 900-1000 lbs 89.50, Heiferettes; 1300-1400 lbs 77.00; 1500-1600 lbs 68.00. Slaughter Cows: Boners: 80-85 Pct. Lean; 1500-2000 lbs.; Avg Dressing 56.00-62.00; High Dressing 69.50; Low Dressing 50.00-56.00 Lean: 85-90 Pct. Lean; 1200-1700 lbs.; Avg Dressing 59.00-63.00; Low Dressing 52.00-59.00 Lean: 90 Pct. Lean; 900-1450 lbs.; Avg Dressing 48.00-52.00; Low Dressing 42.00-48.00 Slaughter Bulls: Yield Grade 1-2: 1400-1700 lbs.; Avg Dressing 72.00-79.00; High Dressing 83.00; Low Dressing 64.00-72.00 Bred Cows (Per Head): Medium and Large 1-2: Young (3-6 yrs. old) 1200-1400 1600.00-1850.00 6-9 mos; Mid-Aged (7-8 yrs. old) 1400-1550 lbs. 1400.00-1550.00 6-9 mos; Aged (9-11 yrs. old) 1153 lbs. 825.00 6-9 mos. The USDA LPGMN price report is reflective 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. TOPPENISH (Toppenish Livestock Auction) Jan. 18 Receipts: 1675 Compared to last Thursday: Stocker and feeder cattle steady to 3.00 higher in a light test. Trade active with good demand for all classes. Slaugh- ter cows steady to firm. Slaughter bulls 3.00-4.00 higher. Trade active with good demand as local in- terests need inventory. Slaughter cows 53 percent, slaughter bulls 5 percent, replacement cows 18 percent, and feeders 24 percent of the supply. The feeder supply included 48 percent steers and 52 percent heifers. Near 59 percent of the run weighed over 600 lbs. GRI Cattle Market Reports with the closure of some plants for the holiday, hold- overs are higher. Pacific Northwest milk production is steady. Milk intakes are returning to normal following the annual juggling of holiday milk. The bottling pipeline has mostly refilled following the winter holidays and man- ufacturers are finding milk intakes generally in good balance with processing needs. Milk pooled on Pacific Northwest Order 124 totaled 610.2 million pounds in December 2017. Class I utilization accounted for about 25.9 percent of producer milk. The uniform price was $15.21, down $0.48 from last month and $1.16 below one year ago. In the mountain states of Colorado, Idaho and Utah there is a lot of milk and very little to stanch Washington SHIPPING AREA FWA Chg IDAHO BURBANKS $17.64 -$0.07 IDAHO NORKOTAHS $16.65 -$0.04 SAN LUIS VALLEY $18.84 $0.02 COLUMBIA BASIN $16.65 $0.09 WISCONSIN $18.63 $0.00 9.10 NA NA Livestock Auctions Oregon 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) Jan. 20 NA Dairy Report Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Madison, Wis. Compiled by North American Potato Market News and USDA Agricultural Market Service Compiled by USDA Market News Service • Oklahoma City-Des Moines-St. Joseph, Mo.-Moses Lake, Wash. NATIONAL SLAUGHTER CATTLE SUMMARY Jan. 19 Slaughter cattle trade was mostly inactive in all major feeding regions, with exception of Ne- braska selling dressed trades 3.00 higher. Boxed Beef prices as of Friday afternoon av- eraged 202.51 down 2.43 from last Friday. The Choice/Select spread is 4.70. Slaughter cattle on a national basis for negotiated cash trades through Friday afternoon totaled 18,440 head. Last week’s total head count was 67,031. Midwest Direct Markets: Live Basis: Steers and Heifers: NT Dressed Basis: Steers and Heifers: 195.00 South Plains Direct Markets: Live Basis: Steers and Heifers: NT Slaughter Cows and Bulls (Average Yielding Prices): Slaughter cows and bulls sold steady to 2.00 lower with exception of the Colorado trading 2.00-3.00 higher. Cutter Cow Carcass Cut-Out Value Friday was 170.10 down 0.30 from last Friday. NORTHWEST WEIGHTED DIRECT FEEDER CATTLE This week Last week Last year 2,566 1,519 2,200 Compared to Jan. 12: Feeder steers lightly tested with last week few sales steady to 6.00 higher. Feeder heifers 1.00-3.00 higher. Some cattle at the lower end of the price range were contracted early in the trading period. Cattle futures have traded on the plus side every day since last Friday. The feeder supply included 100 percent over 600 lbs and 62 percent heif- ers. Unless otherwise stated prices are FOB weighting points with 2-3 percent shrink or equivalent and a 5-10 cent slide on calves and a 4-12 cent slide on yearlings from base weights. Current sales are up to 14 days delivery. Feeder Steers Medium and Large 1 70 Head; Avg Wt 725 lbs; Avg Price 154.00; Current Del 468 Head; 800-825 lbs; Avg Price 145.00; Current Del 190 Head; 850-885 lbs; Avg Price 143.00; Current Del 120 Head; 900 lbs; Avg Price 141.00; Current Del Feeder Steers Medium and Large 1-2 131 Head; 750-780 lbs; Avg Price 146.00; Current Del Feeder Heifers Medium and Large 1 369 Head; 615-625 lbs; Avg Price 153.04; Current Del 215 Head; 675-685 lbs; Avg Price 144.00; Current Del 860 Head; 700 lbs; Avg Price; 144.71; Cur- rent Del 143 Head; 750-775 lbs; Avg Price; 139.14; Current Del