Coronavirus fears cause falls on daily limits for US hogs and cattle

US hog and cattle contracts fell on their daily trading limits on 27 January, hitting multi-month lows on fears about the spread of a coronavirus in China.
calendar icon 28 January 2020
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"If we thought China's coronavirus was making the media rounds late last week, it's a full-fledged media frenzy this morning," INTL FCStone said in a note to clients. "The public's concern there is reminiscent of prior SARS and bird flu events, both of which resulted in slowed Chinese travel, restaurant consumption, and a general slowdown in commerce."

The outbreak has killed 81 people in China, stranded tens of millions during the biggest holiday of the year and rattled global market. China extended its Lunar New Year holiday and the Shanghai stock exchange said it will reopen 3 February. More big businesses in China shut down and told staff to work from home in a bid to contain the disease's spread.

April live cattle futures reached their lowest price since 23 October. The contract dropped its daily limit of 3 cents, ending at 121.300 cents per pound at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

CME March feeder cattle futures dropped their limit of 4.5 cents to 135.175 cents per pound and touched their lowest level since 24 September.

CME February lean hog futures fell 1.275 cents to 65.95 cents per pound. The most-active April contract ended down its daily trading limit of 3 cents at 70.450 cents, hitting its lowest since 7 August.

The livestock markets will trade with expanded limits on Tuesday.

Traders also said uncertainty about Chinese demand for US meat hung over the market as it waited for signs of stepped-up purchases following an initial trade deal between Beijing and Washington on 15 January.

--Reuters

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