Big Bite: Why beef is soaring in price - Action News
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Big Bite: Why beef is soaring in price

Food is getting more expensive and you have mostly beef to blame for that. We travel to a ranch in southern Alberta to understand why that steak is 40 per cent pricier than it was five years ago.

Beef taking a Big Bite out of your food budget? It may be because cattle herds have been shrinking

A bull roams in Hugh Lynch-Staunton's fields in southern Alberta. (Judy Aldous/CBC)

The winds that blow through Antelope Butte Ranch, located roughly 200 kilometres south of Calgary where the mountains meet the Prairies, are volatile like the price of beef.

Todayprices are up and the wind is down.

"Sometimes you do well. Sometimes you don't. These are good years right now," saidHugh Lynch-Staunton as he walks into a fenced areawhere his bulls are keptfrom the 1,000 cows who pasture in fields out of sight.

Lynch-Staunton's grandfatherbought the first piece of land here in thecorner of Albertain 1886, and the family has grown the operation to become one of the biggest cattle ranches in the country.

This Alberta Century Farm and Ranch Award plaque resides on a rock at the Antelope Butte Ranch. (Judy Aldous/CBC)

With the price of beefrising40 per cent over the past five years, they are making a good profit like many ranchers all over Alberta. It's a case of low supply and high demand.

"There have been a number of years where beef was either marginally profitable or unprofitable, so alot of people went out of business either voluntarily or had to because they were losing money, so the supply is really down. Shorter supply can't meet demand so prices go up."

Lynch-Staunton(who's father Frank was Alberta's 11th Lieutenant Governor)says it's part of a cycle that typically lasts six to nine years.

"What we can see now is the U.S. is expanding their herd and Canada may be on the verge of doing that, so eventually we will overproduce and the price will go down."

U.S. prices starting to decline

He says his ranch won't be buying more cattle, as they"do that when prices are low and then sell when they're high."

Dallas Rodger's family is taking advantage of the high prices to increase their herd size by 25 per cent.

Hugh Lynch-Staunton is a longtime cattle rancher. (Judy Aldous/CBC)

Rodger works as a market analyst with Canfax, a branch of the Canadian Cattlemen's Association that follows the cattle industry.His family ranch is east of Crossfield.

Rodger says live cattle sold for an all-time high of $2a pound in Julyup 20 per cent in a year. He says that has since dropped to $1.70 per pound.

He addsthe reduced number of beef cattle in Alberta (at its smallest numbers since 1989) have pushed prices up as have increased capital costs.

Machinery is also expensiveHugh Lynch-Staunton says his son, who runs the ranch, is looking at buying a "modest-sized tractor for $250,000and hay has doubled in price over the year because of the drought.

Indications are that the priceof beef will stabilize within six months and then start to drop. In the U.S., prices have already started their decline.

For now, Lynch-Staunton says they'll enjoy the good times, knowing they never last.

"What most ranchers have done is try to pay down the debt they've accumulated. After that they try to reinvest on their farms. Perhaps they'll have a few more holidays or do some work on their houses."