Reuter’s Daniel Wiessner reported that, “a group of unions, nonprofits and U.S. municipalities has asked a federal judge to block the U.S. Department of Agriculture's planned reorganization, including the relocation…
USDA Revises Beef Export Data, Lowers Sales by 90%
Reuter’s Tom Polansek reported that, “the U.S. Department of Agriculture dramatically lowered its reported beef export sales on Thursday, sparking fresh concerns about the quality of the agency’s data after staffing losses as part of the Trump administration’s reshaping of the federal government.”
AgroLatam’s Marco Díaz Collins reported that, “the revised report showed that exporters sold a net 12,064 metric tons of U.S. beef during the week ending June 25, compared with the 126,062 metric tons initially reported on July 2. The original figures suggested a nearly 500% week-over-week surge in beef sales, an increase that many market participants considered unrealistic given current supply conditions.”
“Analysts pointed out that several importing countries were listed as purchasing volumes far beyond their historical buying patterns, raising immediate questions about whether the numbers accurately reflected market activity before the USDA acknowledged the reporting error,” Collins reported.
RFD-TV’s Tony St. James reported that, “the adjustment included previous entries tied to Chile, Italy, Japan, Hong Kong, and several other markets.”
“After the correction, weekly beef activity returned closer to normal levels,” James reported. “The latest report showed sales of 14,000 metric tons and exports of 14,500 metric tons, led by traditional buyers including Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Taiwan, and Canada.”
Trust in USDA Reports Wavers
Rural Radio Network reported that, “the revision comes as the U.S. cattle industry faces some of its tightest supplies in decades. Record-high beef prices, strong consumer demand and reduced cattle numbers have increased attention on every market signal, including USDA export reports that producers, exporters and traders use to make business decisions.”
“Trust in USDA reports has suffered among traders, analysts and farmers following deep staff losses and after the agency significantly underestimated corn acres last year,” Polansek reported. “USDA also delayed a quarterly agricultural trade report and excluded findings that pointed to tariffs as a reason for a forecast increase in the agricultural trade deficit, which analysts said raised questions about its objectivity.”
“Trust in USDA reports has suffered among traders, analysts and farmers following deep staff losses and after the agency significantly underestimated corn acres last year. USDA also delayed a quarterly agricultural trade report and excluded findings that pointed to tariffs as a reason for a forecast increase in the agricultural trade deficit, which analysts said raised questions about its objectivity.”
“The agency initially defended the original figures, stating on July 2 that it had contacted the exporting company and confirmed the reported quantities,” Collins reported. “However, in Thursday’s revised report, the USDA simply stated that the export sales had been ‘reported in error’ without offering additional details about what caused the mistake or how it passed internal verification procedures. For producers, exporters, investors, and commodity traders who depend on timely and accurate government statistics, the incident highlights the growing importance of confidence in official agricultural data as markets continue navigating volatile prices and tight livestock supplies.”
“The agency said on Friday that data integrity and accuracy were its highest priorities,” Polansek reported.
“’Should the USDA have caught it? Probably,’ said Austin Schroeder, a commodity analyst at Brugler Marketing & Management,” Polansek reported. “‘They may have just overlooked it.’”
“The reporting mistake also comes as USDA has experienced significant workforce reductions,” Rural Radio Network reported. “More than 24,000 employees have left the department since early 2025, according to U.S. Office of Personnel Management data, reducing the agency’s workforce by nearly 27%. The National Agricultural Statistics Service, which collects and publishes crop and livestock data, has seen its staffing decline by about 37%, according to the federal workforce data.”
“Analysts say confidence in those reports is especially important during periods of volatility, when even a single data point can influence expectations for cattle prices and demand,” Rural Radio Network reported. “The USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service also recently transitioned to a new export reporting system, though the agency has not indicated the system change caused the reporting error.”
