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
Strong crush demand and rising ethanol production are pressuring feedstocks, as traders monitor storage risks and supply chain uncertainty and await the upcoming January WASDE report.
January 06, 2026 01:04 PM
·
The U.S. Meat Export Federation plans to expand its global market presence in the New Year and says it is focusing its appeal on the growing middle class worldwide.
January 06, 2026 12:21 PM
·
New World Screwworm cases in Mexico, including one within 200 miles of the U.S. border, are adding pressure to livestock markets and trade decisions.
January 06, 2026 12:09 PM
·
Preserving equity through active risk management remains critical in a volatile, supply-driven market.
January 06, 2026 06:00 AM
·
USDA data indicates that 13.7 percent of U.S. households experienced food insecurity in 2024, the highest rate since 2014, even as most households remained food secure.
January 05, 2026 03:58 PM
·
Weather, Tight Supplies, and Planning Shape Farm Decisions
January 05, 2026 03:23 PM
·
Bigger cows must wean proportionally heavier calves to justify higher ownership costs.
January 05, 2026 03:08 PM
·
Improving consumer confidence supports baseline food and fuel demand, but cautious spending limits upside potential for ag markets in 2026.
January 05, 2026 03:00 PM
·
Strong ethanol production and export trends continue to support corn demand despite seasonal fuel consumption softness.
January 05, 2026 02:49 PM
·