JBS Subsidiary Swift Beef Announces Closure as Processing Shocks Drive Major Swings in Beef Price Spreads

Plan for sharp, short-term volatility after unexpected outages; permanent closures rarely trigger major price spread disruptions.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RFD-TV) — A subsidiary of JBS will close a beef facility in the coming weeks. Swift Beef Company will close its Riverside, California, plant in February, laying off 374 workers. The company told Meatingplace that production will be transferred to other facilities. This comes just after Tyson announced significant cuts to processing capacity in Nebraska and Texas.

Temporary processing plant outages can sharply widen the beef live-to-cutout price spread and increase week-to-week volatility, according to a new summary by Christopher N. Boyer, Professor of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Tennessee. The findings show that unexpected shutdowns push spreads far above normal levels for several weeks, creating immediate financial and operational pressure for cattle producers and feedyards.

The analysis shows that these temporary shocks — such as the 2019 Tyson Holcomb fire and the COVID-19 slowdown — remove capacity without warning, causing harvest delays, firmer boxed beef values, and unstable grid returns. During these periods, producers typically face wider basis risk, tighter cash flow, and increased uncertainty in marketing plans.

Permanent plant closures tell a different story. Because they are telegraphed in advance, the cattle industry adjusts routing, freight, and scheduling before capacity is lost. As a result, spreads before and after a permanent closure resemble normal trading behavior with little persistent volatility.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Plan for sharp, short-term volatility after unexpected outages; permanent closures rarely trigger major price spread disruptions.

Related Stories
Kevin Charleston of Specialty Risk Insurance discusses the importance of grain bin safety and joint efforts with Nationwide to provide farmers and first responders with access to critical, life-saving rescue tubes.
Dr. Kelly Bruns from the Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture discusses how the college prepares students for careers in agriculture.
Bankruptcy filings reflect prolonged margin pressure, rising debt, and limited financial flexibility across farm country. Bigger operating loans are helping farms manage costs, but they also signal growing reliance on borrowed capital.
RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey was in Mission, Texas, where state and federal officials addressed growers and producers at a round table event hosted at a citrus grower’s facility. He shows us how welcome news was all around.
A transition from traditional, technology-specific subsidies toward a performance-based, technology-neutral framework
Lower freight costs helped sustain export demand amid a challenging pricing environment.

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:

Land equity protects solvency but does not replace profitability.
Reliable canal infrastructure supports long-term access to global agricultural markets.
Corn export pace remains the bright spot, but stable ethanol export demand remains a critical support for corn markets.
Rail consolidation could affect grain basis, freight rates, and service reliability across major producing regions.
For communities that depend on agriculture as their primary economic engine, the recession is not defined by headlines on Wall Street. It is defined by the quiet disappearance of the businesses that once processed, serviced, and supported the crop.
It’s National FFA Week, and today we’re celebrating Alumni Day by highlighting some inspiring former FFA members making an impact in agriculture and beyond.
Agriculture Shows
Hosted by Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady and RFD News Markets Specialist Tony St. James, Commodity Talk delivers expert insight into the day’s ag commodity markets just before the CME opens. Only on RFD-TV and Rural Radio SiriusXM Channel 147.
A look at the news, weather and commodities headlines that drove agriculture markets in the past week.
Everything profits from prairie. Soil, air, water — and all kinds of life! Learn how you can improve your land with prairie restoration, cover crops and prairie strips, while growing your bottom line.
Special 3-part series tells the story of the Claas family’s legacy, which changed agriculture forever.