Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Beef proving to be more profitable than chicken in pandemic

- By Tatiana Freitas and Michael Hirtzer

Inexpensiv­e chicken was supposed to be the pick of the proteins during the pandemic. But suppliers with a greater focus on beef are outperform­ing those that rely more on poultry.

U. S. and Brazilian chicken producers have been struggling amid oversupply, weak prices and sluggish consumptio­n, with analysts saying a production cut may be needed to prop up prices. Beef suppliers have benefited from comparativ­ely stronger demand and prices.

In the U. S., meat production has recovered from virus disruption­s, meaning supplies are outstrippi­ng demand amid stillslugg­ish food- service sales. With beef output back to normal, red meat is likely to compete with chicken for grocery store sales.

“We are going to have this flood of red meat coming into the market,” said Peter Galbo, an analyst at Bank of America, adding that retail features for beef are expected to rise “dramatical­ly” this autumn.

Meanwhile, chicken prices are too low and demand too weak to justify advertisem­ents that can help generate sales.

Sanderson Farms, the thirdbigge­st U. S. chicken producer, estimated last week its total production in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020 will fall 5% from a year earlier. CEO Joe Sanderson predicted “lower demand during the holiday season for all of our products.”

In Brazil, a top chicken exporter, lower output or higher prices may be inevitable to cover a sharp rise in feed costs, said Ricardo Santin, head of exporter group ABPA.

Local corn and soymeal prices are at all- time highs amid strong demand and local currency weakness that boosts the appeal for exports. Corn prices should stay high amid tight supplies this year, according to Ana Luiza Lodi, an analyst at StoneX in Campinas. The government is considerin­g exempting imports from tariffs to lower costs. Almost 80% of the cost of producing birds comes from feed in the country.

Brazilian poultry companies face weakness in both export and local sales. Traditiona­l buyers such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have reduced imports substantia­lly this year. Export prices in August fell 20% from a year earlier.

China is the exception, with Brazil’s exports to the Asian nation climbing 28% this year. But China represents just 17% of Brazilian chicken exports. It’s a different situation in beef, with shipments breaking records this year due to China, which accounts for almost 60% of Brazilian exports.

While a slump in the Brazilian real boosts export revenue in local currency, that hasn’t been enough to offset higher costs, squeezing exporters’ margins since May, according to Cesar de Castro Alves, an agricultur­e consultant at Itau BBA. In August, chicken production margins were negative 5%.

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