An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S

Because of a prevalent concern that feeder heifer prices are often bid below their true value, particularly in Virginia, a study was made of factors affecting price differentials between steers and heifers, and of variations in these differentials across regions and over time. The fall market sex pr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jessee, David L.
Other Authors: Agricultural Economics
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71225
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-71225
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-712252020-09-29T05:42:28Z An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S Jessee, David L. Agricultural Economics LD5655.V855 1978.J47 Cattle trade -- United States Because of a prevalent concern that feeder heifer prices are often bid below their true value, particularly in Virginia, a study was made of factors affecting price differentials between steers and heifers, and of variations in these differentials across regions and over time. The fall market sex price differential for feeder calves in Virginia (1964 through 1976) was compared to the differential in five other regions: the Corn Belt, the Southeast, the Plains, the Mountain States, and California. A cross-section time-series model was designed in which sex price differentials across years and regions were regressed against hay prices, short-term feeder cattle price expectations, the corn price, the fed cattle sex price differential, and the heifer-steer proportion on feed. In addition to these economic variables, five regional zero-one intercept shifters were included; all explanatory variables accounted for 84.8 percent of the variation in the feeder sex price differential, while the economic variables alone accounted for 71.6 percent of the variation across regions and over time. Based upon this research, the steer-heifer feeder price differential in Virginia may be expected in most years to exceed the sex price spread in other markets; however, the estimated effect of the economic variables was not sufficient to entirely account for the higher Virginia sex price differential. One possible reason is that some relevant economic variable(s) were excluded; or pricing distortions may exist due to a lack of price information or due to imperfections in the grading system. Master of Science 2016-05-23T17:53:55Z 2016-05-23T17:53:55Z 1978 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71225 en_US OCLC# 8521392 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 88 leaves. application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1978.J47
Cattle trade -- United States
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1978.J47
Cattle trade -- United States
Jessee, David L.
An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
description Because of a prevalent concern that feeder heifer prices are often bid below their true value, particularly in Virginia, a study was made of factors affecting price differentials between steers and heifers, and of variations in these differentials across regions and over time. The fall market sex price differential for feeder calves in Virginia (1964 through 1976) was compared to the differential in five other regions: the Corn Belt, the Southeast, the Plains, the Mountain States, and California. A cross-section time-series model was designed in which sex price differentials across years and regions were regressed against hay prices, short-term feeder cattle price expectations, the corn price, the fed cattle sex price differential, and the heifer-steer proportion on feed. In addition to these economic variables, five regional zero-one intercept shifters were included; all explanatory variables accounted for 84.8 percent of the variation in the feeder sex price differential, while the economic variables alone accounted for 71.6 percent of the variation across regions and over time. Based upon this research, the steer-heifer feeder price differential in Virginia may be expected in most years to exceed the sex price spread in other markets; however, the estimated effect of the economic variables was not sufficient to entirely account for the higher Virginia sex price differential. One possible reason is that some relevant economic variable(s) were excluded; or pricing distortions may exist due to a lack of price information or due to imperfections in the grading system. === Master of Science
author2 Agricultural Economics
author_facet Agricultural Economics
Jessee, David L.
author Jessee, David L.
author_sort Jessee, David L.
title An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
title_short An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
title_full An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
title_fullStr An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the U. S
title_sort analysis of feeder steer-heifer price differentials in the u. s
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71225
work_keys_str_mv AT jesseedavidl ananalysisoffeedersteerheiferpricedifferentialsintheus
AT jesseedavidl analysisoffeedersteerheiferpricedifferentialsintheus
_version_ 1719345363727417344