LUBBOCK, TEXAS (RFD NEWS) — A proposed settlement in the Agri Stats antitrust case would force major changes in how the company collects, packages, and sells market information to the meat industry. The biggest step is that Agri Stats would have to stop offering its Sales Report Books, which were central to the case.
The settlement would also ban several reporting features critics said made the system too revealing. Agri Stats would no longer be allowed to show participant lists, rankings, or “flags,” and it could only report individual company data in narrow situations, such as returning a contributor’s own information back to that contributor.
The proposal also opens access more broadly. Agri Stats would have to make its reports and manuals available for purchase to anyone in the United States, not just meat processors, and it could not discourage outside buyers by offering worse terms or higher prices.
Other changes would slow and aggregate the data more heavily. Major reports would have to meet stricter confidentiality thresholds, and most reported data would need to be at least 45 days old on average, with some production-decision data delayed even longer.
The company would also be placed under outside oversight through a court-approved monitor and a formal antitrust compliance program. The monitor could remain in place for up to seven years, while the overall judgment would last ten years unless ended sooner.
Farm-Level Takeaway: The Agri Stats settlement would not shut the company down, but it would sharply limit how it reports meat industry data and how long it can operate without outside oversight.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Rural population growth and stabilizing economic indicators point to post-pandemic recovery, but uneven income, shifting industries, and regional divides remain key challenges for rural communities.
January 23, 2026 08:00 AM
·
Jack Hubbard, with the Center for the Environment and Welfare, shares context and perspective on the controversial letter about Prop 12 circulating in Washington and how a review shows it misled the public.
January 22, 2026 06:25 PM
·
Decoupled base acres may amplify income inequality and distort planting decisions as farm program payments increase.
January 22, 2026 12:56 PM
·
From tariff talks in Europe to SCOTUS uncertainty and rising farm losses, analysts say policy and global supply will shape grain markets in the year ahead.
January 22, 2026 12:40 PM
·
Ethanol and corn groups are not hiding their disappointment over new reports that the bill to allow year-round E15 sales failed as Congress forges ahead on government funding, with another shutdown looming.
January 22, 2026 11:24 AM
·
Oil-led rallies can move soybean prices quickly, but sustained gains will require continued strength in soybean oil and broader biofuel demand signals.
January 22, 2026 10:39 AM
·