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Brazil's Meat Exports Break Records-And Show How Trade Bends, Not Breaks
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) São Paulo - In September, Brazil shipped a record 314,700 metric tons of fresh beef, up 25.1% from a year earlier and surpassing the previous peak set in July.
The milestone landed just a month after Washington raised the overall duty on Brazilian beef to about 76.4%. Rather than stall, exporters rerouted: sales to Mexico accelerated, China stayed the top buyer, and shipments to the United States narrowed to higher-value cuts.
Total exports dipped in August to roughly 268,600 tons and then snapped back to September's high. The story behind the story is about supply and scale.
The United States is running with a historically tight cattle herd, keeping global demand firm even when tariffs rise. Brazil, meanwhile, has the size and logistics to pivot quickly-large packing capacity, multiple ports, and long experience serving very different markets.
That makes it easier to redirect cargoes without shutting plants or stranding ranchers. The strength wasn't limited to beef. Brazil's chicken exports reached 482,300 tons in September, the best month in 11 months, though revenue fell 10.1% to $857.9 million as prices softened.
For the first time, South Africa topped the monthly buyer list with 38,700 tons, followed by the United Arab Emirates, Mexico, and Japan-evidence that poultry sellers are widening their customer base.
Brazil's Pork Exports Hit Record
Pork set a monthly record too: 151,600 tons, with revenue up 29.9% to $368.4 million, led by demand from the Philippines, Japan, Vietnam, and Mexico .
Why this matters outside Brazil: When a major supplier like Brazil keeps product moving despite new barriers, it can blunt price spikes in importing countries where livestock supplies are tight.
For Brazil's farm belt, diversified markets help keep slaughterhouses running and incomes steadier when politics turn the tap in one market.
And for policymakers, the episode is a reminder that tariffs often rearrange trade flows rather than stop them-changing who buys, who pays, and who gains.
What to watch next: whether Mexico and China keep absorbing larger beef volumes, if U.S. prices pull more product despite higher duties, whether poultry prices stabilize enough to lift revenue, and how buyer rules-from animal health to sustainability-reshape Brazil's export mix.
The milestone landed just a month after Washington raised the overall duty on Brazilian beef to about 76.4%. Rather than stall, exporters rerouted: sales to Mexico accelerated, China stayed the top buyer, and shipments to the United States narrowed to higher-value cuts.
Total exports dipped in August to roughly 268,600 tons and then snapped back to September's high. The story behind the story is about supply and scale.
The United States is running with a historically tight cattle herd, keeping global demand firm even when tariffs rise. Brazil, meanwhile, has the size and logistics to pivot quickly-large packing capacity, multiple ports, and long experience serving very different markets.
That makes it easier to redirect cargoes without shutting plants or stranding ranchers. The strength wasn't limited to beef. Brazil's chicken exports reached 482,300 tons in September, the best month in 11 months, though revenue fell 10.1% to $857.9 million as prices softened.
For the first time, South Africa topped the monthly buyer list with 38,700 tons, followed by the United Arab Emirates, Mexico, and Japan-evidence that poultry sellers are widening their customer base.
Brazil's Pork Exports Hit Record
Pork set a monthly record too: 151,600 tons, with revenue up 29.9% to $368.4 million, led by demand from the Philippines, Japan, Vietnam, and Mexico .
Why this matters outside Brazil: When a major supplier like Brazil keeps product moving despite new barriers, it can blunt price spikes in importing countries where livestock supplies are tight.
For Brazil's farm belt, diversified markets help keep slaughterhouses running and incomes steadier when politics turn the tap in one market.
And for policymakers, the episode is a reminder that tariffs often rearrange trade flows rather than stop them-changing who buys, who pays, and who gains.
What to watch next: whether Mexico and China keep absorbing larger beef volumes, if U.S. prices pull more product despite higher duties, whether poultry prices stabilize enough to lift revenue, and how buyer rules-from animal health to sustainability-reshape Brazil's export mix.

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