By
Laura Whelan MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- After facing their lowest levels in 20 years,
catfish prices may be on the rise. Catfish
prices had declined due to an oversupply in the market. The
supply should become short again soon, causing demand to
exceed supply and prices to rise. In
previous months, catfish farmers cut labor and feed costs
and cut back on stocking their ponds just to maintain
production. "MSU
Extension agents helped farmers streamline their production,
improve efficiency and institute cost-effective management
to keep their farms going," Steeby reported. "Catfish
is a solid product with a loyal buyer base. Producers hope
that this is a turning point in the market, and that prices
will reflect high demand for their catfish," Steeby
said. Hugh
Warren, executive vice president of Catfish Farmers of
America, said catfish producers are hoping for a bright spot
in the market. "There
is definitely cautious optimism that prices have bottomed
out and are now headed up," he said. The CFA
recently brought an anti-dumping lawsuit against Vietnamese
catfish producers who were glutting the U.S. market with
catfish sold at deflated prices. The Department of Commerce
issued a preliminary ruling in January imposing tariffs as
high as 64 percent on the imports, which raised the foreign
prices to more competitive levels. The International Trade
Commission should make a permanent decision on the outcome
of the case in the next few months. In the
meantime, there is reason to believe that the decrease in
catfish imports has helped America's catfish producers.
"The
implementation of those tariffs has had a positive impact on
the market and could lead to higher prices for the U.S.
producer," Warren said. Mississippi
produces more than 60 percent of all catfish consumed in the
nation, and the state's catfish industry amasses more than
$2 billion per year. Steeby reported that U.S. processing
reached an industry record of 630 million pounds of catfish
in 2002. Marketing
efforts like those made by the Mississippi-based Catfish
Institute have made farm-raised catfish the
fourth-best-selling fish in the United States. The upcoming
Catfish Festival in Belzoni on April 5 is an annual event
that draws more than 20,000 attendees and generates interest
and publicity for the state's catfish industry. -30- Released:
March 31, 2003 Publications
may download
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at 200 d.p.i.
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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Catfish markets
look better in '03
"After
about a year and a half of struggling with low prices,
catfish producers may see prices rising from 55 to 60 cents
per pound to around 65 cents per pound within the next few
weeks," said James Steeby, Mississippi State University
Extension aquaculture specialist.
Contact: Dr. James Steeby, (662) 247-2915
Visit: DAFVM
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