February's red meat exports in the US below last year, but 2021 outlook remains strong

Published Apr 9, 2021

Tridge summary

U.S. beef and pork exports in February remained below the pace set in early 2020 due to logistical challenges and labor shortages, but are in line with projections and expected to increase substantially for beef and surpass the 2020 record for pork. Beef exports to China and South Korea are surging, while pork demand is expanding in the Philippines and Central America. Despite these challenges, domestic business and strong cutout values are supporting the industry.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

February exports of U.S. beef and pork remained below the rapid pace established in early 2020, according to data released by USDA and compiled by the U.S. Meat Export Federation (USMEF). However, exports were consistent with USMEF’s February projections and the federation still expects 2021 beef exports to increase substantially year-over-year, while pork exports are projected to narrowly surpass the 2020 record. ​ Beef exports totaled 103,493 metric tons (mt) in February, down 8% from a year ago, valued at $669.5 million (down 2%). This was due mainly to a decline in variety meat exports, as beef muscle cuts were steady with last year in value at $597.9 million on a volume of 82,530 mt (down 3%). Through February, beef exports were 5% below last year’s pace at 208,540 mt, valued at $1.32 billion (down 2%). Beef muscle cut exports were down 1% to 163,928 mt and steady in value at $1.18 billion. ​ February pork exports were down 12% from a year ago at 239,240 mt, valued at $629.4 ...
Source: Usmef

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