LUBBOCK, Texas (RFD-TV) — U.S. cattle supply and packing capacity are tightening again as Tyson Foods announced it will close its Lexington, Nebraska, beef plant and scale its Amarillo, Texas, facility to one full-capacity shift. The decision — delivered just after 3 p.m. CST on Friday — immediately raises concerns for cattle producers, feed yards, and rural communities that rely on these plants for market access and jobs. Industry analysts say the move reflects both shrinking cattle numbers and the company’s need to cut costs after posting weaker beef earnings in fiscal 2025.
Tyson’s Q4 financials showed company-wide sales up modestly, but beef profitability is still under heavy pressure. Adjusted operating income rose across most divisions, yet the beef segment is projected to post a $400–$600 million loss in fiscal 2026 as the national cattle herd remains at a 70-year low. Today’s restructuring will shift volumes to other Tyson plants, but it reduces total U.S. packing capacity at a time when producers already face fewer competitive bids.
The announcement drew immediate political reaction. U.S. Sen. Deb Fischer, R-NE, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee — and a longtime advocate for strengthening competition in the cattle market — warned that the closure will strain rural economies and reinforce the need for broader reforms to ensure producers have fair access to markets.
Sen. Fischer released the following statement after Tyson Foods announced it will close the beef processing plant located in Lexington:
Lexington, like Plainview, Texas, in 2013, now faces the same disruption Cargill caused when it shuttered a 4,650-head/day plant, leading to local job losses and a sharp drop in cattle-market confidence. Back then, live cattle futures collapsed; analysts expect similar volatility in the days ahead as markets digest Tyson’s shift.
Producers across Nebraska, Kansas, and the Texas Panhandle are bracing for ripple effects. Reduced procurement zones often force feedyards to truck cattle farther, lowering net prices and tightening already weak margins. Competition among packers — already limited — may narrow further in some regions. For rural towns built around major plants, the loss of hundreds of high-wage jobs will have long-term economic implications.
Looking ahead, Tyson says production will be redistributed to other facilities to maintain beef supply, and the company pledged relocation assistance for displaced workers. But with the U.S. cattle herd not expected to rebound meaningfully until 2027 or later, industry observers say more structural adjustments may follow. Tyson itself forecasts stronger performance from pork, chicken, and prepared foods next year, but continued losses in beef underscore the severity of supply-side constraints.
The announcement of Tyson closing a packing plant in Nebraska sent shockwaves through the cattle industry over the weekend. Tyson will shut down its Lexington, Nebraska, facility and turn its Amarillo, Texas, plant into a single, full-capacity shift. The move comes as the U.S. beef supply dwindles and just weeks after President Donald Trump called for an investigation into meatpackers.
RFD-TV Market Specialists Tony St. James and Scott Shellady were joined by Stone-X Economist Arlan Suderman on Monday’s Market Day Report for a roundtable discussion on the Tyson closure’s impact on the beef industry.
In their conversation, they go over what we know and what it means for cattle producers, and if they believe the announcement will cause further uncertainty in the cattle markets. They also discussed the Trump Administration’s ongoing investigation into the “Big Four” meat packers, including Tyson. They also discussed similar incidents like this in the past and those impacts, as well as lawmakers like Sen. Deb Fischer’s concern over the strain it puts on rural economies.
As industry reaction pours in, livestock expert and friend of the show, Dr. David Anderson, told Tony St. James the news doesn’t come as a major surprise to him.
“We all know Tyson’s one of our big four meat packers — you know, this plant in Nebraska is a big plant — it has a capacity of, I think, 5,000 head a day; that’s a big beef plant,” Dr. Anderson explained. “But, you know, in the bigger picture, we’ve got the fewest number of beef cows in the U.S. since 1961. We have fewer calves. We have fewer cattle on feed. And I think this is a fear a lot of people had that at some point, you know, some part of our packing capacity would be at risk of closure just simply because there are not enough animals. And so, I think we’re all hoping that something like this would not happen -- but that it has --I don’t think it should be a big surprise.”
This all comes just weeks after President Trump called for a federal investigation into meatpacker practices. Industry group R-CALF USA is backing the move. CEO Bill Bullard says it mirrors their own antitrust lawsuit filed six years ago, which is still moving through the courts. He compares it to a similar review of packer practices launched during the president’s first term.
“To our knowledge, that investigation is still open, and so we believe that they’ve probably been watching these private actions because they’re being well represented by law firms that are very credible and have the resources to pursue these cases,” Bullard said. ”So it would make sense for the government to conserve its resources and watch as these private actions unfold. So, any way you cut this, this is exactly what we need for our cattle industry and for our sheep industry.”
Bullard says R-CALF hopes to work with the Administration to share information and help restore fair competition in the beef and lamb supply chains.