Beef futures climb on tight supply, record prices - CME

Hog market steadies ahead of expected fall slaughter rise
calendar icon 19 August 2025
clock icon 2 minute read

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) cattle futures continued a rally on Monday as traders reckoned with near-record high wholesale beef prices and a tight supply of cattle as calf imports from Mexico remained closed, reported Reuters

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Friday announced it would spend $750 million to build a facility in Texas that produces sterile flies to fight the flesh-eating livestock pest.

Despite trade expectations that the US-Mexico border would re-open to cattle imports, the plan signals increasing worries about the risk of screwworm, a parasitic fly that eats livestock and wildlife alive, to infest US cattle after the pest moved north in Mexico toward the US border.

"The main point is the border is going to be closed for an undetermined time frame," Rich Nelson, strategist at Allendale, said.

CME October live cattle futures ended 0.525 cents higher at 231.175 cents per pound. September feeder cattle rose 3.575 cents to 350.925 cents per pound.

Soaring wholesale beef prices kept cattle futures well supported as meatpackers cut back on slaughter rates to help protect margins from further losses.

The choice boxed beef cutout value was up $3.67 on Monday afternoon at $404.24 per hundredweight (cwt), the highest since the early days of the COVID pandemic in May 2020, according to USDA data. The select beef cutout was up $6.38 to $377.14 per cwt.

Lean hog futures also rose as traders awaited a seasonal rise in hog slaughter to begin.

CME October lean hogs gained 0.025 cents to settle at 90.125 cents per pound.

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