NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — Interest rate relief may help cattle producers somewhat in 2026, but Matt Erickson of Terrain says expectations still need to stay realistic. He expects short-term rates to ease cautiously, while longer-term borrowing costs tied to land, facilities, and other major investments remain elevated.
Erickson said that matters because many cattle operations carry a mix of operating debt, term loans, and real estate financing. In his view, profitability next year will depend less on where rates settle and more on balance-sheet discipline, liquidity, and the efficient use of capital.
He said short-term credit should provide the clearest relief. Variable-rate feeder and breeding cattle loans are expected to benefit the most if the Federal Reserve continues measured easing, but he warned that lower operating rates do not automatically offset higher input costs.
Long-term rates are a different story. Erickson said resilient labor demand, sticky inflation, and heavy federal borrowing are all likely to keep long-end rates from falling much, even if the Fed trims short-term policy rates.
That leaves a cautious message for cattle country. Erickson says modest rate cuts may help cash flow, but debt-financed expansion still faces a much tougher environment than producers saw in the ultra-low-rate years.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Matt Erickson says cattle producers may get some operating credit relief, but land and facility borrowing costs are likely to remain tough.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
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