Livestock Marketing Information Center
In The Cattle Markets
Updated: 2/9/2026
Trade and Weather in the News
The recent announcement of successful trade negotiations with Argentina comes with the news of an expanded beef import quota into the US of 80,000 MT.
Livestock Monitor
Updated: 1/23/2026
HEIFERS AS A PERCENT ON FEED INCREASES FROM OCTOBER LEVELS
The final Cattle on Feed report for 2025 was released today by the USDA-National Agriculture Statistics Service (NASS) with January 1 inventory levels. Overall, the report was about as close as one could hope with pre-report estimates. Total cattle on feed came in spot on at down -3.2% to 11.45 million head. Losses during the month came as a result of what has been nine consecutive months of declines in placements. In December, placements on feed fell -5.4% to 1.55 million head, which was higher than the average -6.9% loss expected by analysts. At the other end of the yard, marketings increased in December by +1.8% to 1.77 million head at the inclusion of one additional slaughter day compared to a year ago; the realized value was +0.1% higher from average forecasts.
COLD STORAGE STOCKS: RED MEAT DECLINES, CHICKEN RISES
USDA-NASS released the December Cold Storage report, and as of the first of the month, total red meat in cold storage was reported down nearly -3% from last year to 845.3 million pounds. In 2025, red meat stocks trended below a year ago for each month. Total beef in cold storage as of December 1st was down -3.5% to 437.5 million pounds. Stock levels during the fourth quarter trended below year-ago levels, which signaled stronger demand heading into the holiday season, especially for boneless beef cuts.
CHICKEN INDUSTRY KEEPING PRODUCTION PLANS IN CHECK FOR 2026
Broiler-type chick hatchery output was up +1% in December, the 10th consecutive month of either no change from a year earlier or a 1% change. Broiler meat production in 2025 was up +2.3% from a year earlier (based on 11 months of hard data from USDA-NASS) with about half of the increase accounted for by heavier average birds at time of processing. The forecast for hatchings in the first quarter of 2026 shows a similar +1% increase compared to the first quarter of 2025.
Livestock Monitor (pdf)
