Hides Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Pound

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Jun 2025: 15.892 (50.83%)
Chart

Description: Hides, Heavy native steers, over 53 pounds, wholesale dealer's price, US, Chicago, fob Shipping Point, Russian Ruble per Pound

Unit: Russian Ruble per Pound



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Hides are the outer skin of cattle and are traded as an agricultural raw material after slaughter and initial preservation. In commodity markets, hides are commonly quoted by weight, with heavy native steer hides often used as a reference grade. A traditional benchmark is hides, heavy native steers, over 53 lbs, FOB Chicago, US cents per pound, which reflects a standardized North American trading point and grade specification. Hides are valued primarily as a feedstock for leather production, where they are processed into finished leather for footwear, upholstery, apparel, luggage, and industrial goods. They also have secondary uses in gelatin and other collagen-based products after further processing.

Because hides are a byproduct of beef production rather than a crop or mined mineral, their market is tied closely to cattle slaughter, hide quality, and tanning demand. The commodity is shaped by the interaction between livestock supply, leather manufacturing, and the availability of substitute materials such as synthetic leather and textiles.

Supply Drivers

Hide supply is structurally linked to cattle slaughter, so it depends on the size and composition of cattle herds, feed availability, pasture conditions, and the economics of beef production. Major producing regions include North and South America, Europe, Australia, and parts of Asia, where cattle industries are long established. Since hides are obtained only when animals are processed for meat, supply follows livestock cycles rather than a direct planting or mining schedule. Herd rebuilding and liquidation phases can therefore affect hide availability over multi-year periods.

Quality is also important. Hide value depends on animal breed, age, weight, and the extent of damage from branding, parasites, horn marks, insect bites, and barbed-wire scars. Climate and husbandry practices matter because hot, humid conditions can increase insect pressure and skin defects, while extensive grazing systems can raise the risk of surface damage. Preservation and transport are critical as well: hides must be salted, chilled, or otherwise handled quickly after slaughter to prevent bacterial decay. This creates a logistical link between slaughterhouses, cold-chain infrastructure, and export channels. Because hides are a byproduct, supply can remain available even when leather demand weakens, but the usable supply of higher-grade material is constrained by animal condition and processing standards.

Demand Drivers

Demand for hides is driven mainly by leather manufacturing, which uses hide collagen to produce durable material for footwear, furniture, automotive interiors, belts, bags, and industrial applications. Footwear and upholstery are especially important because they require abrasion resistance, flexibility, and a premium appearance that leather can provide. Demand is also influenced by consumer preferences for natural materials, fashion cycles, and the durability advantages of leather in long-life goods.

Substitution is a central structural feature. Hides compete with synthetic alternatives such as polyurethane and polyvinyl chloride-based materials, as well as with textile substitutes in some end uses. When synthetic materials offer lower cost, easier maintenance, or more consistent appearance, they can displace leather in price-sensitive segments. At the same time, leather retains demand in segments where tactile quality, longevity, and prestige matter. Demand is therefore split between higher-value applications and lower-cost mass-market uses.

Seasonality is less pronounced than in many crops, but leather demand often follows broader manufacturing and retail cycles, including footwear production and furniture orders. Income levels matter because leather goods are partly discretionary purchases, so demand tends to be stronger in periods of expanding consumer spending. Environmental and regulatory standards also shape demand through restrictions on tanning chemicals and wastewater treatment, which affect processing costs and the location of leather manufacturing.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Hides are priced in a market that is sensitive to the US dollar because international trade in agricultural raw materials is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced hides more expensive for non-US buyers, while a weaker dollar can support export competitiveness. Hides also respond to broader industrial activity because leather demand is tied to manufacturing, consumer durables, and discretionary spending.

Storage and financing costs matter, but less than for storable grains or metals because hides are perishable unless preserved. This limits long-term inventory accumulation and can create sharper local price effects when slaughter schedules or tannery demand shift. Freight costs and trade logistics also influence regional price differentials, especially for a benchmark quoted FOB at a specific shipping point. Because hides are a byproduct, their price can move differently from the main livestock complex: beef economics determine supply, while leather and substitute-material demand determine the value captured by the hide.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202131.26-
Apr 202131.540.88%
May 202129.72-5.78%
Jun 202128.84-2.95%
Jul 202137.4829.94%
Aug 202140.267.44%
Sep 202141.573.24%
Oct 202140.50-2.57%
Nov 202141.291.95%
Dec 202142.573.10%
Jan 202244.935.53%
Feb 202245.801.96%
Mar 202258.5627.84%
Apr 202244.42-24.14%
May 202236.20-18.50%
Jun 202233.18-8.36%
Jul 202233.15-0.08%
Aug 202235.166.06%
Sep 202233.43-4.93%
Oct 202234.453.05%
Nov 202235.452.90%
Dec 202237.967.08%
Jan 202340.877.68%
Feb 202341.892.49%
Mar 202344.967.33%
Apr 202349.249.52%
May 202346.38-5.79%
Jun 202350.398.63%
Jul 202354.808.75%
Aug 202355.160.66%
Sep 202355.350.35%
Oct 202354.76-1.06%
Nov 202352.52-4.09%
Dec 202353.201.30%
Jan 202451.94-2.36%
Feb 202452.961.96%
Mar 202454.052.05%
Apr 202453.56-0.90%
May 202453.820.48%
Jun 202451.46-4.40%
Jul 202451.600.29%
Aug 202453.784.21%
Sep 202454.000.42%
Oct 202456.935.43%
Nov 202457.781.48%
Dec 202459.783.48%
Jan 202557.03-4.61%
Feb 202553.47-6.23%
Mar 202551.76-3.21%
Apr 202549.23-4.89%
May 202546.75-5.04%
Jun 202547.160.87%

Top Companies

Tyson Fresh Meats (formerly IBP Inc)
Website: http://www.tyson.com/
Location: Denison, Iowa, USA

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