Farmscape Canada

 


Audio 
Audio Manitoba Listen
Audio Saskatchewan Listen
Full Interview 6:12 Listen

Average user rating:

3.8 out of 5.0

Rate this Article:

Name:
Email:
Comments:




Printer Friendly Version
Made In Canada Hog Pricing Considered Impractical
Perry Mohr - h@ms Marketing Services

Farmscape for October 25, 2013

The general manager of h@ms Marketing Services expects Canada's pork processors to consider formalizing alternative live hog pricing options in the event of future suspensions of USDA's tracking of hog pricing information.
As a result of the partial U.S. government shutdown the U.S. Department of Agriculture's tracking of hog pricing information used by industry to establish daily live hog prices were suspended for just over two weeks forcing North American pork processors to find alternative hog pricing strategies.
H@ms marketing Services general manager Perry Mohr says a "made in Canada price" has been discussed for a number of years but in order to adapt such a price the Canadian industry would need to make major changes.

Clip-Perry Mohr-h@ms Marketing Services:
The structure I think of the industry would need to change significantly.
What I mean by that is, I believe that the industry exports roughly 40 percent of what we produce.
In order to have a made in Canada price ideally you wouldn't be exporting nearly that amount and the domestic market would have a much bigger impact on local hog prices.
Because we're so heavily reliant on exports right now it just simply isn't practical I believe to look at made in Canada pricing.
Having said that, what I do think is going to happen in the future and we all negotiate contracts and I think the latest developments will make us proactive in establishing within the terms and conditions of a contract what kind of pricing mechanisms we will use in the event that this information does not become available again.
I think we will be much more formal than we have been in the past in having that actually set out within the contractual agreements that we sign.

Despite the uncertainty created by the suspension of USDA's tracking of hog pricing information Mohr believes producers were paid fairly for their hogs and he's confident how hog prices are paid can be fine tuned in the event this happens again.
For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.


       *Farmscape is a presentation of Sask Pork and Manitoba Pork Council

© Wonderworks Canada 2013
Home   |   News   |   Archive   |   Today's Script   |   About Us   |   Sponsors  |   Links   |   Newsletter  |   RSS Feed
farmscape.ca © 2000-2019  |  Swine Health   |   Privacy Policy  |   Terms Of Use  |  Site Design