China’s WH Group predicts lower US pork exports to China for second half of 2020

WH Group expects pork exports from the United States to China to fall in the second half as the coronavirus crisis continues to hit pork volumes at US processing plants, pushing up prices.
calendar icon 12 August 2020
clock icon 4 minute read

Reuters reports that WH Group’s Chief Financial Officer Guo Lijun made the prediction on 11 August.

China’s pork imports have surged in the first half of 2020, with arrivals from the US being especially high.

But high numbers of COVID-19 cases in US slaughter plants has impacted processing capacity and raised costs, including at WH Group-owned Smithfield Foods, the world's biggest pork processor.

Five of the firm's plants are still running below normal capacity, Guo told reporters after the company reported a 20.9 percent jump in first-half profits.

He added that the continuing spread of the virus would continue to impact the slaughter business and pressure hog prices.

Higher prices for packaged meats in China and Europe more than offset weak prices and sales volumes in the United States, where packaged meat revenues fell 9 percent to $3.4 billion and operating profit in the segment dropped 45.5 percent.

The group's first-half profit attributable to owners of the company, before biological fair value adjustments, totalled $550 million, compared with $463 million a year earlier, while revenues rose 12.2 percent to $12.5 billion.

Chinese pork prices, on average 137 percent higher than in the same period a year ago, supported higher selling prices for packaged meats in the company's domestic market, boosting revenues even as sales volumes declined 1.5 percent.

The high prices, an ongoing result of the epidemic of African swine fever which devastated China's hog herd last year, also boosted fresh pork revenues in China by 56.9 percent, even as the number of hogs slaughtered plunged 62 percent to 3.27 million head.

"Remarkable sales growth" of imported pork helped plug the gap in supplies, the company said in a statement.

Though China's hog herd is recovering, ongoing outbreaks of African swine fever and rising grain costs risk keeping hog prices high, Guo said.

Read more about this story here.

© 2000 - 2024 - Global Ag Media. All Rights Reserved | No part of this site may be reproduced without permission.