U.S. livestock: Cattle futures dip as Brazilian beef tariffs lifted
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Cattle futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were weaker on Friday, pressured by the removal of United States tariffs on Brazilian beef announced Thursday.
The 40-per cent tariffs were removed by the White House to bring down beef prices and should result in Brazilian beef moving into the U.S. once again. Talk that the U.S. government was considering reopening the U.S./Mexico border to Mexican cattle once again also circulated the market.
The February live cattle contract lost 0.625 cents per pound at 214.775 cents. Feeder cattle were down 2.150 cents in the January contract at 314.225 cents per pound.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported wholesale boxed beef prices were slightly firmer, with choice boxes up five cents at $371.28 per hundredweight and select boxes up $0.63 at $354.18/cwt.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture released updated cattle on feed data after the markets closed. Cattle and calves on feed as of Nov. 1, 2025, were down two per cent from the same point a year ago, at 11.7 million head. There were 11. 4 million head on feed as of Oct. 1, 2025.
Placements at feedlots in October came in at 2.04 million head, which was down 10 per cent from the same month a year ago.
Lean hog prices were down 1.950 cents per pound in the February contract at 77.725 cents per pound.