WASHINGTON, D.C. (RFD News) — U.S. commercial red meat production rose in March as a stronger pork run more than offset lower beef output. March production reached 4.51 billion pounds, up 2 percent from a year earlier.
Pork production totaled 2.40 billion pounds, up 7 percent from March 2025. Hog slaughter rose 6 percent to 11.0 million head, while average live weight edged up 1 pound to 292 pounds.
Beef production moved the other way. Output totaled 2.10 billion pounds, down 3 percent from a year ago. Cattle slaughter fell 6 percent to 2.34 million head, but average live weight climbed 45 pounds to 1,471 pounds.
Other species were lower as well. Veal production fell 16 percent, with calf slaughter down 23 percent. Lamb and mutton production dropped 6 percent, and sheep slaughter slipped 1 percent from last year.
For the first quarter, commercial red meat production totaled 13.2 billion pounds, down 2 percent from 2025 as lower beef output continued to weigh on the total.
Farm-Level Takeaway: March pork gains lifted total meat production, but first-quarter output still ran below last year.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
Reduced winter placements indicate tighter fed cattle supplies and greater leverage during peak-demand months.
January 09, 2026 06:00 AM
·
Federal nutrition policy is signaling a stronger demand for whole foods produced by U.S. farmers and ranchers. Consumer-facing guidance favors animal protein, but institutional demand may change little under existing saturated fat limits.
January 08, 2026 11:42 AM
·
Rail strength is helping stabilize grain movement, but river and export slowdowns continue to limit overall logistics momentum.
January 08, 2026 06:00 AM
·
Retail pricing confirms tight cattle supplies and supports continued leverage for producers, reinforcing the need for disciplined risk management.
January 07, 2026 06:00 PM
·
Long-term demand uncertainty is reshaping specialty crop strategies as producers adapt to fewer, older consumers.
January 07, 2026 08:01 AM
·
Seasonal boxed beef softness does not change the tight-supply outlook — leverage remains closer to the farm gate heading into 2026.
January 07, 2026 06:00 AM
·