Boxed Beef Pullback Reflects Seasonal Pause, Not Weakness

Seasonal boxed beef softness does not change the tight-supply outlook — leverage remains closer to the farm gate heading into 2026.

Set of various classic, alternative raw meat, veal beef steaks - chateau mignon, t-bone, tomahawk, striploin, tenderloin, new york steak. Flat lay top ... See More By ricka_kinamoto_adobe stock.png

Photo by ricka_kinamoto via Adobe Stock

NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD-TV) — U.S. boxed beef values (PDF Version) are easing from holiday highs, but the latest data point to seasonal adjustment rather than weakening demand or deteriorating fundamentals. Choice cutout values slipped into the low-$350s late in December, yet five-day averages remain historically elevated, signaling continued tightness across the beef complex.

The modest decline reflects post-holiday inventory resets and a narrowing Choice/Select spread, not a collapse in buying interest. Load counts fell week to week but remain roughly double last year’s levels, indicating packers are still actively moving product despite softer pricing.

Packer margins are tightening slightly as boxed beef eases, but throughput remains the dominant factor. Ground beef and trimming values are holding firm, supporting overall cutout stability and limiting downside risk. The Packers continue to manage production carefully, as reduced slaughter capacity and limited cattle supplies constrain flexibility.

For producers, the bigger signal is structural. Lower placements, no meaningful herd expansion, and shrinking slaughter capacity mean fed cattle availability will remain tight into spring. Even with short-term pullbacks in boxed beef prices, packers will need to compete for cattle to keep plants operating efficiently.

The market is pausing, not turning.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Seasonal boxed beef softness does not change the tight-supply outlook — leverage remains closer to the farm gate heading into 2026.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Specialist
Related Stories
A regional snapshot of harvest pace, crop conditions, logistics, and livestock economics across U.S. agriculture, prepared by RFD-TV Markets Specialist Tony St. James, for the week of Monday, November 24, 2025.
One trader said the products entering the U.S. are primarily grind and trim, noting that the volume and type of beef, on its own, should not cause a major disruption. However, he says fund traders are reacting heavily to headlines rather than market realities.
According to November’s Cattle on Feed Report, Nebraska now leads the nation in cattle feeding as tighter supplies continue to reshape regional market power and long-term price dynamics.
Higher rail tariffs and tighter Canadian supplies will keep oat transportation costs firm into 2026.
Lower U.S. and Mexican production means tighter sugar supplies and greater reliance on imports headed into 2026.
Tyson’s closure reflects deep supply shortages in the U.S. cattle industry, tightening packing capacity, weakening competition, and signaling more volatility ahead for cow-calf producers and feedyards.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Focus on home radon testing—not changing your diet—because background sources vastly outweigh any exposure from naturally radioactive foods.
Prepare for acute UAN risk and a brief urea shock; maintain steady ammonia and phosphate plans, and monitor potash basis on the coasts.
Agricultural exports continue to be a key contributor to rural employment. However, rural businesses still struggle to fill numerous job openings.
Farm debt is climbing to record levels at ag banks, reflecting pressure on crop producers’ finances even as livestock and land values lend stability to the sector.
Farmers are in the midst of harvest as the government descends into a shutdown and the Farm Bill expires. Key federal departments, crop reporting, and aid programs important to the agricultural sector are now on hold.
Trump’s upcoming talks raise hopes for U.S. soybeans, but China’s record purchases from Brazil and Argentina show America’s market share remains under heavy pressure.