Difficult year for Brazilian pig farming due to high production costs

Published Dec 29, 2022

Tridge summary

Brazilian pig farming faced a challenging year due to high production costs and high domestic pork availability, leading to negative margins for most of the year. The sector saw bankruptcies and withdrawals, particularly among independent farmers. While exports improved in the second half of the year, prices, and live pig prices failed to meet farmers' needs. High availability and increased supply are expected to continue in 2023, maintaining the sector's challenges.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Difficult year for Brazilian pig farming due to high production costs and high domestic availability of pork (advance in production and retraction in exports). Pig farmers’ margins were negative for practically the entire year. The independent producer’s losses reached BRL 300 per head in the first half, as happened in Santa Catarina. Bankruptcy and withdrawal from the activity occurred, mainly amid independent farmers with a more fragile capital structure, those who were already indebted in 2021. The increase in production that took place in Brazil is the result of investments made during the period when China suffered from ASF and increased its imports. The most difficult period of 2022 was the first half, with a retraction in demand, both internal and external. Brazilian pork exports fell due to the retraction of purchases from China. There was, on the other hand, the expansion of sales to other destinations, such as the Philippines, Japan, Vietnam, which helped but were not ...

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