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- FFA Spotlight
- No Till Notes: “It’s More Than No Tillage II”
- Neb. ag college tries to bring soldiers home
- Nebraskans urged to thank farmers next week
- UNL crop production budgets for western Nebraska updated
- Animal Care Legislation Moving in Missouri
- Idaho Considering Livestock Care Standards Board
- POET Tightens Water Use
- U.N. Climate Report To Be Reviewed
- Heineman to proclaim Nebraska Ag week on Monday
- USDA organic initative sign up period extended
- USDA Tightening Guidance on Pork Contracts
- Neb. ag college wants soliders to farm
- Farm Bureau Reports on Views of Young Farmers and Ranchers
- More Testimony on Cuban Trade-Travel
- Rural Jobs, Rural Opportunities conference coming to Kearney
- FB President Testifies on Cuban Trade Issues
- House Ag Discusses Benefits of Trade with Cuba
- Vilsack makes appointments to Beef Board
- DOJ & USDA hold workshop on competition in Iowa
- NCBA Commends Senators for beef trade resolution
- Gov. Heineman Calls on Congress to Stop EPA Regulation
- Senators Want Japanese Restriction on Beef Lifted
- NAWG President McReynolds Testifies on Cuba trade
- Current Cuban Embargo Works Against Growers
- Kansas Farm Bureau "Insight"
- Grassley Reacts to President’s Trade Movement
- NAFEC President Testifies
- Nebraska Grain Sorghum Board Meeting Scheduled
- USGC Announces International Conference
- President Forms Export Promotion Cabinet
“We presume that NCBA’s representative has a basis for his alarming implication that feeder cattle prices are at the mercy of changes in poultry supplies,” said
1. While poultry may act as a constraint to increases in consumer beef prices because consumers can switch to poultry if the price of beef is perceived as too high, the hundreds of thousands of disaggregated farmers and ranchers who raise and sell feeder cattle cannot similarly respond to lower cattle prices by switching to poultry production if a merger facilitates the exercise of buying power and results in lower feeder cattle prices.
2. JBS likely is the largest purchaser of feeder cattle following its 2008 purchase of Five Rivers Ranch Cattle Feeding, LLC (“Five Rivers”), the largest cattle feeding company in the
3. The acquisition of Pilgrim’s Pride would give JBS complete control over the output, hence the supply volume, of over 20 percent of
4. The Department of Justice’s Horizontal Merger Guidelines suggest that “mergers should not be permitted to create or enhance market power or to facilitate its exercise,” and that the term “market power” includes the ability “to depress the price paid for a product to a level that is below the competitive price and thereby depress output.”
5. It is inconceivable that a merger that grants what is perhaps the largest domestic purchaser of feeder cattle sole control over the largest domestic supply share of the competing product known to negatively affect feeder cattle prices (i.e., broilers) would not significantly enhance market power and facilitate its exercise. The JBS/Pilgrim’s Pride merger likely will result in the reduction of the price paid for feeder cattle that is below the competitive price. This enhancement of market power and facilitation thereof is a violation of
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