Overview Swine, or pork, is a major animal protein traded in commodity markets as live hogs, carcass equivalents, and processed cuts. The most widely followed benchmark in the United States is the lean hog contract, commonly quoted in U.S. cents per pound and tied to carcass value rather than retail pork cuts. Market references often use a 51–52% lean specification, which reflects the fat-to-lean composition of the animal and helps standardize pricing across animals of different weights and feed efficiencies. Pork is consumed fresh, chilled, frozen, cured, and processed into bacon, ham, sausages, and a wide range of prepared foods. It is also an important input for food service and industrial meat processing. Because pork is both a staple protein and a highly processed ingredient, its pricing reflects conditions in livestock production, feed markets, slaughter capacity, and consumer demand across multiple product forms. Supply Drivers Pork supply is shaped by biological production cycles and feed availability. Hog production depends on breeding herds, farrowing, and finishing periods that create a lag between producer decisions and market supply. This lag makes supply slow to adjust to changes in feed costs or expected prices. Feed is a central cost because corn and soybean meal are the main inputs in modern hog finishing systems; changes in grain prices affect margins and herd expansion decisions. Production is concentrated in regions with abundant feed grains, established slaughter infrastructure, and efficient transport links, especially North America, Europe, and parts of East Asia. Animal disease is a persistent supply risk. Hog herds are vulnerable to outbreaks that reduce productivity, increase mortality, and disrupt trade flows. Climate also matters because heat stress lowers feed intake and growth rates, while cold conditions raise energy needs and housing costs. Transport and slaughter bottlenecks can constrain market-ready animals, especially when packing capacity is concentrated. Unlike crops, pork supply cannot be rapidly expanded, since herd rebuilding takes time and breeding decisions are made well before animals reach market weight. These structural features make supply responsive to biology, feed economics, and processing capacity rather than to short-term price signals alone. Demand Drivers Pork demand reflects both household consumption and industrial food use. It is a staple protein in many diets and a key ingredient in processed foods, which gives it demand from retail, food service, and manufacturing channels. Consumption patterns vary by region and culture: in parts of Europe and East Asia, pork is a traditional protein, while in other markets it competes more directly with poultry, beef, and fish. Because consumers can substitute among animal proteins, relative prices across meats strongly influence pork demand. Processed pork products such as bacon, ham, sausages, and deli meats create demand for specific carcass components, not just whole animals. This means pricing depends on the value of different cuts and by-products, as well as on consumer preferences for fresh versus processed meat. Seasonal demand patterns are common, with holiday and grilling seasons affecting cut values and slaughter schedules. Income growth generally supports higher meat consumption and a shift toward higher-value cuts and processed products, while lower incomes tend to favor cheaper proteins. Food safety standards, refrigeration, and cold-chain logistics also shape demand by enabling long-distance trade and wider product distribution. Macro and Financial Drivers Pork prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because international trade in meat is commonly priced in dollars, so currency movements affect import and export competitiveness. Feed costs link pork to broader grain markets, making the commodity sensitive to inflation in agricultural inputs. Interest rates matter because livestock production requires working capital for feed, housing, and inventory, while processors and traders manage storage, financing, and hedging costs. Pork is a storable but perishable commodity, so futures pricing often reflects the cost of holding frozen inventories and the balance between immediate slaughter demand and deferred delivery. Like other livestock markets, pork can show seasonal patterns in futures spreads when supply and storage conditions differ across the production cycle. Related Commodities Corn and soybean meal are key input commodities because they determine feed costs. Live cattle and broiler chicken are important substitutes on the demand side, since consumers often switch among animal proteins based on relative prices. Beef trimmings can also complement pork in processed products such as sausages and ground meat blends.