COW/CALF
CORNER
The
Newsletter
From
the Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service
April
4, 2016
Mexican beef
exports continue to grow
Derrell S. Peel,
Oklahoma State University Extension Livestock Marketing Specialist
Mexican
beef exports have grown rapidly in recent years. Total beef exports began
increasing in 2009 and have increased from about 28 thousand metric tons in
2008 to over 161 thousand metric tons in 2015, a nearly six-fold
increase. Currently, Mexico is the tenth largest beef exporting country,
exceeding Argentina for the first time in 2015. The U.S. is the largest
destination for Mexican beef exports and the U.S. share of total Mexican beef
exports has increased from around 60 percent a few years ago to 90 percent in
2015. Mexico also exports beef to Japan but the quantity and share of
exports to Japan has decreased the past two years. Previous exports to
Russia in 2011and 2012 have ceased because of issues with beta agonists.
Much
of Mexico’s beef export growth is due to Sukarne, the largest cattle feeding
and beef processing company in Mexico. SuKarne ranks as the fifth
or sixth largest beef packing company in North America. The company also
handles pork and chicken. Meat+Poultry magazine lists SuKarne as the
nineteenth largest meat company in North America with projected 2016 sales of
2.5 billion dollars. SuKarne has been processing over 1.2 million head of
cattle annually and accounts for roughly 74 percent of total Mexican beef
exports.
Sukarne
announced in late March that a new feedlot and packing plant complex is
beginning operations in Tlahualilo, Durango. This huge facility has
affiliated feedlot capacity of nearly 300,000 head and the plant has capacity
to process over 800 thousand head of fed cattle and cows per year. The
majority of product from the new facility is expected to be exported. The
plant will represent a substantial increase in demand for cattle across much of
Mexico and will also require large amounts of feed grains for the cattle
feeding operations. Much of the feed grain will be imported from the U.S.
The
Mexican beef industry has changed dramatically in the past 10-15 years.
There has been a significant and rapid expansion in federally inspected
slaughter and widespread adoption of boxed beef technology which expanded
domestic and international market opportunities. The SuKarne company can
be credited with being well positioned and for recognizing and capitalizing on
the tremendous opportunities in Mexican domestic and export markets in the past
decade. However, this growth occurred simultaneously with and
depended on a number of concurrent changes in Mexican food markets and
infrastructure. Mexico has significantly expanded and improved highways
over and around the nearly unlimited supply of mountains in the country.
These improvements greatly increased the ability of Mexican beef companies to
source, assemble and ship cattle over much longer distances to support large
feedlots. Meat distribution systems similarly benefited from improved
transportation infrastructure. The rapid growth and expansion of
supermarkets and increased use of cold storage and refrigerated shipping all
facilitated the growth of large scale meat processing and distribution. I
witnessed the initial construction of the first rail port in Torreon, Mexico
(near to Tlahualilo) some 24 years ago and it is the continued growth and
expansion of these facilities that make importing feed grain for the large
feedlot operation in the new Sukarne facility logistically and economically
feasible.
There
are several potential implications for the U.S. that result from these changes
in the Mexican cattle and beef industry. Mexico has been the fourth
largest source of U.S. beef imports since 2010 is likely to remain a strong and
growing source of imports. Mexico was the third largest U.S. beef export
market in 2015 and will likely remain a significant destination for beef
exports, especially for specific cuts of beef. However, growing
domestic fed beef production and significantly enhanced product
differentiation, due to use of boxed beef in Mexico, likely mean that the
potential for increased U.S. beef exports to Mexico is limited. Finally,
Mexico has been the source of an average of about one million head of feeder
cattle per year for many years. Increased demand for cattle to fill
expanded feedlot capacity in Mexico is likely to push domestic cattle prices
closer to a balance with the U.S. cattle market and will likely reduce both the
incentive to export and the supply of cattle for export. Certainly in the
short run, low cattle inventories and the need for herd rebuilding in Mexico
will squeeze feeder cattle supplies and likely reduce U.S. imports of Mexican
feeder cattle this year and beyond.
Oklahoma State
University, in compliance with Title VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, Executive Order 11246 as amended, Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972, Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and other federal laws and
regulations, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national
origin, sex, age, religion, disability, or status as a veteran in any of its
policies, practices or procedures. This includes but is not limited to
admissions, employment, financial aid, and educational services.
References within this publication to any specific commercial product, process,
or service by trade name, trademark, service mark, manufacturer, or otherwise
does not constitute or imply endorsement by Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service.
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