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Economy & MarketsTuesday, June 16, 2026

Brazil’s Record Slaughter Meets a World of Diverging Beef Fortunes

As Brazilian abattoirs process historic volumes of cattle, Argentine consumers retreat from beef and US ranchers grapple with herd lows, screwworm and trade threats.

Brazil’s livestock sector has opened 2026 with a surge that defied earlier forecasts of contraction. In the first quarter, federally inspected plants slaughtered 10.29 million head of cattle, a 3.3 percent rise on the same period last year and the highest tally for any January-to-March window since records began in 1997. Pig slaughter climbed 5.5 percent to a record 15.2 million, while chicken processors delivered their second-strongest first quarter at 1.7 billion birds. Taken together, the country placed 7.8 million tonnes of carcass-equivalent meat on the market, 7 percent more than a year ago. Viewed from Brasília, the numbers paint a picture of an export powerhouse running at full throttle, even as a 6.9 percent quarter-on-quarter dip in cattle slaughter hints at a normal seasonal easing.

In Buenos Aires, the narrative could hardly be more different. Argentine beef consumption has slumped to its lowest level in two decades, falling to an annualised 47.5 kilograms per capita, according to industry chamber Ciccra. The decline persisted through May despite broadly stable retail prices, underscoring a deeper erosion of purchasing power. On the supply side, the aftermath of the severe 2022 drought continues to constrain the availability of cattle for finishing, driving a 7.3 percent contraction in beef production over the first five months of the year. With the domestic market weakening, the sector’s hopes are pinned on consolidating export channels and a recovery in international prices.

From Washington, the outlook is equally strained. US beef prices have been climbing since early 2025, and the pressure is intensifying. The national cattle herd has shrunk to levels not seen since the 1950s, thinned by prolonged drought. A fresh blow arrived with the spread of screwworm from Mexican herds into the United States, threatening further supply losses. The timing is politically delicate: President Donald Trump warned of new tariffs on Mexico just as bilateral trade negotiators prepared to meet on 16-17 June to discuss the future of the North American trade framework. Any disruption to the deeply integrated US-Mexico livestock chain could amplify the cost pressures already hitting American consumers at the start of grilling season.

Analysts in London note that these three snapshots reveal a global beef market in unusual disequilibrium. Brazil’s record output offers a cushion for world supply, yet the spectre of protectionism—whether from Washington or other importing blocs—could complicate the flow of that surplus to where it is most needed. Argentina, traditionally a major exporter, may find itself competing with Brazilian volumes in key markets just as it seeks to offset domestic weakness. The coming months will test whether trade diplomacy can keep channels open, or whether the diverging fortunes of the Americas’ great cattle nations will deepen into a more fragmented and costly global protein trade.

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Upd. 09:14 PM1 language · 2 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
2 outlets|1 language|3 min read
Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Brazil’s Record Slaughter Meets a World of Diverging Beef Fortunes

As Brazilian abattoirs process historic volumes of cattle, Argentine consumers retreat from beef and US ranchers grapple with herd lows, screwworm and trade threats.

Brazil’s livestock sector has opened 2026 with a surge that defied earlier forecasts of contraction. In the first quarter, federally inspected plants slaughtered 10.29 million head of cattle, a 3.3 percent rise on the same period last year and the highest tally for any January-to-March window since records began in 1997. Pig slaughter climbed 5.5 percent to a record 15.2 million, while chicken processors delivered their second-strongest first quarter at 1.7 billion birds. Taken together, the country placed 7.8 million tonnes of carcass-equivalent meat on the market, 7 percent more than a year ago. Viewed from Brasília, the numbers paint a picture of an export powerhouse running at full throttle, even as a 6.9 percent quarter-on-quarter dip in cattle slaughter hints at a normal seasonal easing.

In Buenos Aires, the narrative could hardly be more different. Argentine beef consumption has slumped to its lowest level in two decades, falling to an annualised 47.5 kilograms per capita, according to industry chamber Ciccra. The decline persisted through May despite broadly stable retail prices, underscoring a deeper erosion of purchasing power. On the supply side, the aftermath of the severe 2022 drought continues to constrain the availability of cattle for finishing, driving a 7.3 percent contraction in beef production over the first five months of the year. With the domestic market weakening, the sector’s hopes are pinned on consolidating export channels and a recovery in international prices.

From Washington, the outlook is equally strained. US beef prices have been climbing since early 2025, and the pressure is intensifying. The national cattle herd has shrunk to levels not seen since the 1950s, thinned by prolonged drought. A fresh blow arrived with the spread of screwworm from Mexican herds into the United States, threatening further supply losses. The timing is politically delicate: President Donald Trump warned of new tariffs on Mexico just as bilateral trade negotiators prepared to meet on 16-17 June to discuss the future of the North American trade framework. Any disruption to the deeply integrated US-Mexico livestock chain could amplify the cost pressures already hitting American consumers at the start of grilling season.

Analysts in London note that these three snapshots reveal a global beef market in unusual disequilibrium. Brazil’s record output offers a cushion for world supply, yet the spectre of protectionism—whether from Washington or other importing blocs—could complicate the flow of that surplus to where it is most needed. Argentina, traditionally a major exporter, may find itself competing with Brazilian volumes in key markets just as it seeks to offset domestic weakness. The coming months will test whether trade diplomacy can keep channels open, or whether the diverging fortunes of the Americas’ great cattle nations will deepen into a more fragmented and costly global protein trade.

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