America’s vanishing cattle herd drives 15% price hikes for beef

(Bloomberg) — Even as U.S. inflation has eased from its pandemic-era peak, prices at grocery store meat counters are soaring with no sign of relief.

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Beef costs are rising faster than most other commodities in the Consumer Price Index, with the beef and veal category up 15% in the past year through January. Government data released on Friday showed raw ground beef prices soared to their highest level since June 2020, setting a new record.

These gains are striking compared with the general improvement in the rest of consumers’ grocery baskets. Chicken prices have risen just 1.1% over the past 12 months, while milk prices have changed little.

The blame game behind soaring beef prices forces a response from the White House. U.S. President Donald Trump has vowed to increase competition in beef processing and raise import quotas for Argentine beef to ease supplies.

But it’s not that simple: The U.S. cattle herd has shrunk to its lowest level since the early 1950s in recent years due to drought and higher production costs, including rising interest rates, making it more expensive to raise livestock.

Photographer: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg
Photographer: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg

While the cattle industry is cyclical, the current contraction is lasting longer than expected because there is more money to be made by slaughtering young animals when they are sold than by raising them to expand herds.

Don Close, senior animal protein analyst at Terrain Ag, said that at current levels, any expansion of the U.S. cattle herd would hit retail counters as early as 2028, keeping beef prices elevated for longer.

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The ongoing cattle shortage is a boon to ranchers, especially so-called cow-calf producers at the beginning of the supply chain, who sell their young animals to other ranchers. “In my opinion, raising calves should be profitable right now,” said Kansas rancher Brandi Buzzard. But even they think their situation is precarious. Kacie Scherler, a fifth-generation rancher in Oklahoma, said she is being squeezed by an inflationary environment, with costs for equipment, maintenance and land rentals all soaring.

“It actually feels very vulnerable,” said Scherer, who runs a 5,000-acre dairy and calf operation with her husband, Zach Abney. “So while cattle are worth more than ever, the cost of keeping the business going is much higher.”

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