WASHINGTON, DC (RFD NEWS) — Ground beef demand is helping drive a widening U.S. beef trade imbalance as tight domestic cattle supplies limit the lean product needed for hamburger. USDA’s quarterly Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade projects fiscal year 2026 beef and veal imports at $16.3 billion, up from $13.5 billion last year.
Beef exports are forecast at $8.1 billion, below $8.7 billion in fiscal year 2025. High U.S. beef prices and limited production make U.S. products less competitive in export channels.
Most imported beef is not a direct substitute for higher-value grain-finished steaks or roasts. It is lean beef and trimmings blended with fattier domestic trimmings to produce ground beef.
U.S. fed cattle efficiently produce quality beef, but the domestic herd cannot generate enough lean trim to satisfy hamburger demand. That need grows when cow slaughter is low, and cattle supplies are historically tight.
The result is rising imports while strong cattle prices continue. Pork, dairy, and variety meats provide export bright spots, but the beef trade reflects a market trying to supply American consumers with ground beef.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Rising beef imports reflect strong hamburger demand and limited lean supplies, not weak demand for U.S. fed cattle.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Sen. Deb Fischer reintroduces the HAULS Act to update hours-of-service exemptions and definitions affecting livestock and agricultural haulers. She joins us on Market Day Report to share more about her proposed legislation.
January 06, 2026 01:28 PM
·
Corn export strength remains a key demand anchor, while China’s continued involvement in soybeans and sorghum bears close watching for price direction.
January 06, 2026 01:12 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
·
Cotton demand depends on demonstrating performance and reliability buyers can rely on, not messaging alone.
January 05, 2026 02:41 PM
·
A look at the legislative year ahead as lawmakers return to Washington with a slate of trade concerns to tackle in 2026—from new Chinese tariffs on beef imports to the USMCA review this summer.
January 05, 2026 12:20 PM
·