Overview Beef is the meat derived from cattle and is traded in commodity markets as a processed food product rather than as a raw mineral or energy input. The benchmark commonly cited for international pricing is Beef, Australian and New Zealand, CIF US port, 85% lean, quoted in US dollars per kilogram. This specification reflects imported lean beef used in ground-beef and blending applications, where fat content, trim quality, and shipping terms materially affect value. Beef is consumed both as a fresh retail product and as an industrial input for processed foods, foodservice, and further manufacturing. Its market structure is shaped by carcass grading, cut composition, refrigeration requirements, and the distinction between grain-finished and grass-finished production systems. Because cattle are biological assets with long production cycles, beef prices reflect conditions in herd rebuilding, feed availability, slaughter capacity, and cold-chain logistics. The commodity also competes with pork, poultry, and plant-based proteins in many end uses, while premium cuts and manufacturing beef often follow different pricing relationships within the broader cattle complex. Supply Drivers Beef supply is governed by cattle biology, pasture conditions, feed costs, and slaughter capacity. Major producing regions include North and South America, Oceania, and parts of Europe, where extensive grazing land, feed grain access, and established meatpacking infrastructure support large-scale production. In pasture-based systems, rainfall, temperature, and forage quality influence weight gain and calving rates, while drought can reduce herd productivity and trigger liquidation. In feedlot systems, corn and soybean meal prices affect finishing costs and the timing of marketings. Cattle production has long lags: breeding decisions affect supply only after calves are born, raised, and finished, so herd expansion and contraction occur slowly. Disease control, animal health, and biosecurity also matter because outbreaks can restrict trade or raise processing costs. Refrigerated transport and export inspection requirements create bottlenecks, especially for chilled and frozen beef moving long distances. Carcass yield, trim quality, and the balance between high-value cuts and manufacturing beef further shape exportable supply. Seasonal calving patterns in some regions and weather-driven pasture cycles create recurring fluctuations in slaughter availability. Demand Drivers Beef demand is driven by household income, dietary preferences, foodservice use, and the relative prices of competing proteins. It is a high-value protein in many markets, so consumption tends to respond to income growth and urbanization, while lower-priced proteins such as poultry and pork often gain share when consumers trade down. Beef is used in steaks, roasts, ground beef, processed meats, and prepared foods, so different cuts serve different demand segments. Ground beef and trim are especially important in mass-market and foodservice channels, while premium cuts are more sensitive to restaurant demand and consumer preferences for marbling and tenderness. Seasonal patterns matter: grilling and holiday consumption can lift demand in some regions, while institutional and foodservice buying follows school, travel, and hospitality cycles. Substitution with poultry, pork, lamb, and plant proteins is a persistent feature of the market, particularly in processed and blended products. Cultural and religious dietary rules also shape regional demand patterns. In many economies, beef demand is less price-elastic at the premium end than for lower-cost proteins, but broad consumption still responds to retail pricing and household budgets. Macro and Financial Drivers Beef prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect import and export competitiveness. Higher interest rates can weigh on prices indirectly by raising financing costs for inventories, feed, and working capital across the cattle and meatpacking chain. Storage and refrigeration costs matter because beef is perishable, which limits long-term hoarding and makes nearby supply-demand balances important. Unlike storable industrial commodities, beef markets are shaped more by logistics and cold-chain capacity than by large speculative inventories. Feed costs link beef to grain markets, while broader inflation affects labor, transport, and packaging expenses. In periods of tight physical supply, nearby contracts can trade differently from deferred contracts because slaughter timing and cold storage constraints limit arbitrage. Related Commodities Related commodities include live cattle and feeder cattle, which are upstream inputs to beef production and reflect herd and feed conditions. Pork and broiler chicken are the main protein substitutes in consumer diets and foodservice menus, so relative prices influence demand switching. Corn and soybean meal are important feed inputs, linking beef production costs to grain markets.