Abstract: Several empirical analyses of data from fed cattle markets have found a negative correlation between a region's weekly delivery volume of captive supply cattle and contemporaneous price in the local cash market. This negative correlation has been cited as evidence of a causal relationship between the two variables; a relationship in which buyers (beef packing plants) use captive supply procurement as an instrument to depress prices paid to cash market sellers (feeders). This paper investigates circumstances under which this empirical regularity might emerge as a benign artifact of buyer and seller behavior in a fed cattle market in which both sides are price takers. One feature of these markets is that sellers of both market...
Captive supplies have been a contentious issue in the livestock industry for fifteen years and the s...
We use a game-theoretical framework to analyze the coexistence of spot and contract markets in the c...
This paper attempts to improve our understanding of the effects of market prices on cattle marketing...
Abstract: Several empirical analyses of data from fed cattle markets have found a negative correlat...
Several empirical analyses of data from fed cattle markets have found a negative correlation between...
The use of non-cash methods of procuring fed cattle for slaughter has led to concern about the effec...
This study tests the causal direction between captive supply and cash market price in the U.S. cattl...
The recent inclusion of exclusive marketing/procurement agreements between meatpacking and feedlot f...
Increased use of noncash-price procurement methods has concerned cattlemen for the past several year...
This study consists of three essays. The first essay tests the causality between captive supply and ...
Increased use of noncash-price procurement methods has concerned cattlemen for the past several year...
Numerous articles in the agricultural economics literature investigate the empirical relationship be...
Factors affecting western Kansas fed cattle prices during May through November 1990 were investiga...
Information on typical differences in prices and price risk (as measured by the variances of prices)...
In this paper I examine the anatomy of the price captive-supplies relationship to ascertain if some ...
Captive supplies have been a contentious issue in the livestock industry for fifteen years and the s...
We use a game-theoretical framework to analyze the coexistence of spot and contract markets in the c...
This paper attempts to improve our understanding of the effects of market prices on cattle marketing...
Abstract: Several empirical analyses of data from fed cattle markets have found a negative correlat...
Several empirical analyses of data from fed cattle markets have found a negative correlation between...
The use of non-cash methods of procuring fed cattle for slaughter has led to concern about the effec...
This study tests the causal direction between captive supply and cash market price in the U.S. cattl...
The recent inclusion of exclusive marketing/procurement agreements between meatpacking and feedlot f...
Increased use of noncash-price procurement methods has concerned cattlemen for the past several year...
This study consists of three essays. The first essay tests the causality between captive supply and ...
Increased use of noncash-price procurement methods has concerned cattlemen for the past several year...
Numerous articles in the agricultural economics literature investigate the empirical relationship be...
Factors affecting western Kansas fed cattle prices during May through November 1990 were investiga...
Information on typical differences in prices and price risk (as measured by the variances of prices)...
In this paper I examine the anatomy of the price captive-supplies relationship to ascertain if some ...
Captive supplies have been a contentious issue in the livestock industry for fifteen years and the s...
We use a game-theoretical framework to analyze the coexistence of spot and contract markets in the c...
This paper attempts to improve our understanding of the effects of market prices on cattle marketing...