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
President Donald Trump says a deal is nearly done on lowering beef prices, but he has not released details.
Large carryover stocks continue to put pressure on commodity prices, creating uncertainty for growers looking to market their grain.
Peel says Mexico has a much greater capability to expand its beef industry than it did 20 or 30 years ago in terms of its feeding and packing infrastructure.
The impacts of the government shutdown have reached commodity growers with crops to move, ag economists monitoring the harvest without key data reporting, and meat producers in need of new export markets.
Support policies that keep U.S. biofuels at the table—marine demand could materially lift corn grind, crush margins, and rural jobs.
China is not one of our top suppliers of cooking oil, according to USDA ERS data, but does export a lot of used cooking oil to the U.S. for biofuel production.

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:

The EPA proposal laid out two options: fully reallocate all exempted volumes to the 2026–2027 standards, or reallocate half.
U.S. aquaculture may gain competitive ground as harmful subsidies are phased out abroad, but producers should monitor shifts in import supply chains and trade enforcement closely.
Producers may need to prepare for margin pressure in livestock feeding, while dairy farmers could benefit from stronger product demand.
Farmers await concrete trade commitments from China. Until then, export prospects for soybeans, corn, and sorghum remain uncertain against strong South American competition.
National Sorghum Producers CEO Tim Lust said farmers face a challenging year with strong supply, murky trade conditions, and uncertain access to their largest market: China.
RFD-TV Markets Expert Tony St. James breaks down the state of agribusiness and harvest progress across the U.S. for the week of Monday, September 15, 2025.