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Scotty

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News Update
Dec. 18, 2006

Please direct questions to [email protected].


CAB Shines in 2006

A continuous quest for high quality and value led the Certified Angus Beef ® (CAB®) brand to its highest product utilization ever in fiscal year (FY) 2006, which ended Sept. 30.

While supplies of most U.S. cattle began a cyclical increase last year, the high-marbling kind required for the CAB brand did not keep pace. Despite a record-high 13.1 million identified Angus-type cattle, the record-low 14% acceptance rate called for ingenuity from licensees, Certified Angus Beef LLC (CAB) President John Stika said.

The brand's 13,500 licensees worldwide sold more than 544 million pounds (lb.) in 56 countries. That seventh consecutive year of sales greater than half a billion pounds was only possible by marketing nearly 300 lb. of boneless beef equivalent per carcass.

Producers may associate CAB with such items as prime rib and strip steak, but the chuck and round hold the key to higher premiums, said Stika, who served as CAB vice president for business development last year before accepting the top post in November.

"The high-quality steak cuts are easy to market because of well-established demand for such products," he explained. "But our licensees must sell more of each carcass as premium quality if producers are to realize most of the dollar value of their cattle. That creates the pull-through demand and rewards for on-target producers."

According to a survey of licensed packers last year, those rewards have piled up to more than $200 million in grid premiums during the last decade. "It's essential to satisfy consumers, but there is no future for a brand that cannot reward its producers," said Jim Riemann, who recently retired as CAB president. "Consistency, integrity, quality and trust — in every sector of the industry — have always been vital parts of the CAB brand."

The American Angus Association's AngusSource® program provided a new opportunity as the CAB Board voted last June to allow CAB eligibility for all calves registered with that source- and age-verified program. That's in addition to the industry standard of Angus-influenced cattle with a predominantly black hide color.

A partnership with Tyson Foods Inc. that began in February spurred a five-fold increase in CAB Natural brand sales, which allowed large grocery chains to begin offering the natural line by summer. Cattle eligible for the Natural extension have never received antibiotics or hormones, and have been fed a 100% grass and grain diet.

CAB's retail division remained the largest segment, marketing 52%, or 286 million lb. Maximizing the value of CAB ground beef was a key strategy.

Foodservice division sales increased 3% to 187 million lb., the second straight annual record for the division, despite high prices and tight supplies. Waitstaff training led the way, and more restaurants began to feature CAB Natural, CAB Prime or the ultimate combination.

Strong sales of value-added CAB products reflect mainly foodservice demand, but that doesn't always mean restaurants. New venues in the last year have included NFL stadiums in Jacksonville, Fla., and Glendale, Ariz.

Continuing to lead the premium beef category worldwide, CAB brand international sales grew by 10%. Canada, Mexico and Puerto Rico increased business, while Vietnam, Guatemala and Singapore embraced CAB products for the first time. The brand's current and pending trademark registrations increased globally, reflecting widespread recognition of the brand. In fact, the 2005 National Beef Quality Audit (NBQA) confirmed that CAB is the brand most associated with high-quality U.S. beef.

Marketing and educational efforts kept pace with the changing consumer and producer landscapes. On the consumer side, targeted campaigns concluded this year in Pittsburgh, Pa., and Detroit, Mich., while CAB staff expanded promotions in Albany, N.Y., and in Sacramento, Calif. On the producer side, South Dakota and Texas received special attention. The brand's customer service team was incorporated into its brand assurance division, to increase proactive communications with licensees from the start.

Beef purveyors, restaurateurs and retailers identified insufficient marbling as their top concern in the 2005 NBQA. To help identify — and work to overcome — the issues preventing superior marbling, CAB's supply development team worked with academic and business leaders to produce a comprehensive paper that was widely circulated within the beef industry.

The CAB Board voted in September to enhance brand uniformity by replacing its yield grade specification in 2007 with more specific limits on carcass weight, ribeye area and fat thickness. The decision will address retailers' and foodservice operators' growing concern with increasingly large ribeye steaks.

To consumers, the CAB brand is Angus beef at its best®. To producers, it is also The brand that pays®, a newly trademarked phrase that recognizes the millions of dollars paid to producers of CAB qualified cattle each year.

Only 8% of beef can achieve the brand's benchmark standards that ensure mouthwatering flavor, juiciness and tenderness. Offered at more than 13,500 restaurants and retailers throughout the U.S. and internationally, annual brand sales top $2.5 billion. For more information, visit http://www.certifiedangusbeef.com.

— Release provided by CAB.
 
CAB is only selling 296 lbs. of beef per carcass? Where is the balance going? I thought the ground beef market for CAB was smoking?

I'm not fully understanding this. Isn't CAB selling roasts and round along with steaks?

Does anyone have a list of the CAB product line?
 
Smoke and mirrors. People seem to have a bad taste for lawyers. How about spinners who have managed to lead the public to think they own the market?

Anybody dislike them?

I stand by the fact most folks smoother the steak with A1 or Heinz 57. The higher scale thinking folks go for the thinnner stuff. They all think it makes it taste good.

What do you see if you go out to eat with others?
 
Wewild":2xdy14mo said:
Smoke and mirrors. People seem to have a bad taste for lawyers. How about spinners who have managed to lead the public to think they own the market?

Anybody dislike them?

I stand by the fact most folks smoother the steak with A1 or Heinz 57. The higher scale thinking folks go for the thinnner stuff. They all think it makes it taste good.

What do you see if you go out to eat with others?

I like the taste of beef. I don't put stuff on good steak.
 
Scotty":1lvkn544 said:
Maybe this is what you are after. Since a CAB carcass is still bovine it will make the same cuts as any other bovine. So the products should be the same.

http://www.certifiedangusbeef.com/product/vaps.php


I just thought it strange that they are selling only 296 lbs. of meat per animal under the CAB label. Are the carcasses that small or are they mostly fat? What's the deal?

I get a heck of lot more beef from ones I personally harvest. I got 200 lbs of ground from my last one. Plus all the steaks and roasts.

Never heard of a "still bovine"? :roll:
 
MikeC":3dl81gh2 said:
Scotty":3dl81gh2 said:
Maybe this is what you are after. Since a CAB carcass is still bovine it will make the same cuts as any other bovine. So the products should be the same.

http://www.certifiedangusbeef.com/product/vaps.php


I just thought it strange that they are selling only 296 lbs. of meat per animal under the CAB label. Are the carcasses that small or are they mostly fat? What's the deal?

I get a heck of lot more beef from ones I personally harvest. I got 200 lbs of ground from my last one. Plus all the steaks and roasts.

Never heard of a "still bovine"? :roll:
"Still bovine" is Latin for "dead cow". :D
 
296 lbs of retail product off of a ~800 lb carcass is an awfully big chuck of product. That some fat and some bone gets trimmed off at the plant is no big news and that some chucks, rounds, brisket (who buys a CAB brisket???) and trimmings get marketed as commodity beef is no big surprise to me.
 

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