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
Farm Bureau economist Danny Munch explains the importance of timely enrollment, and how the program helps dairy producers safeguard their operations against volatile milk markets.
February 26, 2026 02:25 PM
·
The Ranger Road Fire is fully contained after burning nearly 300,000 acres. Ranchers face significant cattle and fence losses, with recovery efforts underway.
February 26, 2026 01:04 PM
·
USDA Farmer Bridge Assistance payments could begin this weekend as producers face tight margins, shifting acreage expectations, cattle herd contraction, and growing pressure for a stronger farm safety net.
February 26, 2026 12:11 PM
·
A stalled World Trade Organization appeals body increases long-term trade policy risk for U.S. agriculture.
February 26, 2026 06:00 AM
·
Three junior heifer exhibitors continue their trek through the Texas Swing at the San Antonio Stock Show, balancing competition, friendship, and life on the road.
February 25, 2026 04:41 PM
·
Nick Westgerdes of the American Society of Farm Managers & Rural Appraisers breaks down farmland values, rental rates, and sales trends in Illinois, while previewing the upcoming land values conference for 2026.
February 25, 2026 02:59 PM
·