Pork Shortages To Strike America In Two Weeks

Submitted by Hardscrabble Farmer

Via ZeroHedge

We have some troubling news developing deep inside America’s food supply chain network, suggesting rapid food inflation could be dead ahead.

In the last several weeks, six major US meatpacking facilities have shuttered operations because of the coronavirus outbreak. That means 15% of America’s hog-slaughtering capacity has been shifted offline, and there is an additional risk that beef and poultry capacity could be reduced in the weeks ahead, reported Bloomberg.

With every virus-related plant closure, farmers have been denied access to meatpacking facilities/slaughterhouses, resulting in herd overcapacity and suggests euthanizing hogs could be next.

Dennis Smith, a senior account executive at Archer Financial Services, warned that “meat shortages” will occur “two weeks from now in the retail outlets.” That means by the first week of May, certain pork products could be out of stock at grocery stores across the country.

“There is simply no spot pork available. The big box stores will get their needs met, and many others will not.”

Cold storage facilities only have a few weeks to cushion supply disruption of the latest plant closures. Bob Brown, an independent market consultant in Oklahoma, said cold storage supplies have a little more than a week’s worth of production – and wouldn’t be sufficient in satisfying demand.

We noted on Wednesday Tyson Fresh Meats, the beef, and pork subsidiary of Tyson Foods, released a statement that said its top producing pork plant in Waterloo, Iowa, will suspend operations until further notice because of virus-related issues. For similar reasons, Hormel’s Rochelle Foods closed its plant last week. Outbreaks have also forced closures for JBS SA in Minnesota and Colorado and Smithfield Foods Inc. in South Dakota. Several other meatpacking plants have recently come back online from virus-related shutdowns.

“It means the loss of a vital market outlet for farmers and further contributes to the disruption of the nation’s pork supply,” Steve Stouffer, head of Tyson Fresh Meats, warned on Wednesday.

If plant closures like these continue, it could add additional strain on the supply chain and cause “weird dislocations for prices — finished products are surging, while farmers are getting paid much less for animals,” Bloomberg notes.

The chart below shows how meatpacking plant closures have triggered exceptional food price volatility for pork-belly prices — crashing in March, to now doubling in a few days.

“Prices for pork bellies, the cut that’s turned into bacon, have more than doubled in just the four days through Tuesday on supply concerns. With so many fewer hogs moving through slaughter, Smithfield Foods had to shutter facilities in Wisconsin and Missouri that turn pork into finished products like bacon and sausage. 

Meanwhile, prices for the hogs themselves are plummeting. There are way more pigs than can be processed right now, so animals are backing up on farms. Hog futures traded in Chicago are down about 21% in April.” 

As for meatpacking plants, these folks are getting hogs at reduced prices from farmers and turning around and selling finished products to supermarkets for hefty premiums. HedgersEdge shows pork margins have jumped 340% since April 1.

USA Today report warns of a “rash of coronavirus outbreaks at dozens of meatpacking plants across the nation is far more extensive than previously thought:”

“More than 150 of America’s largest meat processing plants operate in counties where the rate of coronavirus infection is already among the nation’s highest, based on the media outlets’ analysis of slaughterhouse locations and county-level COVID-19 infection rates.

These facilities represent more than 1 in 3 of the nation’s biggest beef, pork and poultry processing plants. Rates of infection around these plants are higher than those of 75% of other U.S. counties, the analysis found. 

And while experts say the industry has thus far maintained sufficient production despite infections in at least 2,200 workers at 48 plants, there are fears that the number of cases could continue to rise and that meatpacking plants will become the next disaster zones.”

And if meatpacking plants become the next disaster zone for the virus – resulting in the closure of more plants, then food shortages could materialize and or a rapid surge in prices, a combination that could leave millions angry at a time when an economic depression is unfolding. Food shortages could trigger social unrest… 

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23 Comments
22winmag - TBP's Corona-Gulag Gate Crasher
22winmag - TBP's Corona-Gulag Gate Crasher
April 23, 2020 3:49 pm

Time to buy pork on credit.

Quick!

daddysteve
daddysteve
April 23, 2020 4:18 pm

I wonder if there’s a statistical ethnic misrepresentation among packing plant owners.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  daddysteve
April 23, 2020 7:44 pm

There is certainly a statistical ethnic misrepresentation among packing plant workers.

flash
flash
April 23, 2020 4:45 pm

Forget gold. Go long dried beans and rice.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  flash
April 23, 2020 7:07 pm

Gold is great to transfer wealth from hither to yon. As you alluded to, it’s completely useless in the transition period itself.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Articles of Confederation
April 23, 2020 10:53 pm

I must disagree. If one bought gold before 2003, one would not be complaining too much.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  Anonymous
April 23, 2020 11:36 pm

I did and still do. But if I had to choose one or the other in the transition period, the choice is obvious. Eat, or starve as Scrooge McDuck in a vault.

StackingStock
StackingStock
April 23, 2020 4:52 pm

I’ve been buying from long horn and Ruth Chris steak house wholesalers for the last month. The quality is excellent and the prices well below retail. I’m using it as a Guage too. My freezers are full.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  StackingStock
April 23, 2020 7:08 pm

Can you provide a link? I’d be interested.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Articles of Confederation
April 23, 2020 7:16 pm

AoC, no link, it’s one of those who you know and shoot with all the time type of connections. Glad I have it though.

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  StackingStock
April 23, 2020 7:46 pm

Dang.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
April 23, 2020 4:57 pm

I should have bought that oil for -$40/barrel a couple of days ago. I’d have plenty of bacon money.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Iska Waran
April 23, 2020 7:48 pm

Yes and you would be stuck with a contract for oil that you could not take possession of and would have ended up paying fees until you were able to unload it on someone else. It was all in the futures market for May options that expired Tuesday and had almost nothing to do with the actual price of oil. Brent barely moved that day.

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
April 23, 2020 7:25 pm

Just another facet of the planned-demic. This “shortage” was well forecast three weeks ago. They tried to get us riled up enought to really pull knives over toilet paper, but that did not work. Now people are going to actually run out of money, and there will be no pork and beef in the market. Pretty soon potatoes will be out as well, I suppose. Except for the ones plowed under because McDonalds isn’t buying them….

Aall a fucking scam, designed to drive the rubes right up to, but not quite over, the edge of sanity, comity, and the willingness to obey and fear the police. It is a close game they are playing. I wonder how it will go in Detroit, Cleveland, Newark? I bet no one really cares much.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Brian Reilly
April 23, 2020 7:50 pm

As long as the EBT gets refilled and they can still by their Kools and Colt 45, they will be OTAY.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 23, 2020 7:29 pm

When KFC & Popeyes cannot get chicken the riots in Baltimore will make the Freddie Gray Riots look like a kiddie party

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
April 23, 2020 8:08 pm

Here’s a important side note. Eastern NC produces HUGE amounts of, as Justin Wilson used to say “P-I-G hawg”. The vast amount of fecal waste prodcued goes into diked lagoons. So, assume they can’t sell hawgs…what do they do? Shoot them and call Valley Proteins to haul them off to the fertilizer factory? There ain’t enough trucks to do that, period. The public health angle is being ignored. So, just like no TP, no bacon. We started buying/freezing it & other pork delectibles 2 days ago.

Hardscrabble, 2 things. We love both the amber & light. Had amber on vanilla tonight. Secondly, the 4 largest employers in Charleston Co. are (1) MUSC (med/nursing skool), (2) Tourism, (3) Collitch (Citadel/Coll Of Charleston/Chas Southern), (4) Boeing, (5) Marine/Shipping, oh that’s 5 did I say 4 sorry (apologies to John Cleese).

All 5 are currently screwed. We have <0.03% COVID deaths (mostly old farts like us) when "real" data is used.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 23, 2020 8:49 pm

Too bad we are limited to two per person. However i fight back and say it if two of the same. So i loaded up this morning on two of every kind of pork from different brands. Then did the same at another store. Now i have 17 cubic feet of pig, 2 deer, 65 lbs of beef. Now lets hope my freezers do t go out! I will start my own youtube show in 2 months called “pork king”….i am gonna own the pork barter market in my neighborhood.

Donkey
Donkey
  Anonymous
April 24, 2020 12:09 am

Canned and dried.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 24, 2020 4:10 am

Got Spam?

Morongobill
Morongobill
  Anonymous
April 24, 2020 10:22 am

Spam plant just shut down for 2 weeks.

Glock 1911
Glock 1911
April 24, 2020 8:47 am

Yet another example that shows this whole business for what it is. A planned event for the further destruction and enslavement of people. Just like 9-11. “Pray that your flight does not take place in the winter.”

the night stocker
the night stocker
April 24, 2020 1:12 pm

the meatpacking industry is a heavy political contributor, no pork, no pork..