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KSNT Topeka on MSN19h
Cattle ranchers see beef marketing opportunity in trade warKansas City area livestock producers are closely watching the economy as the United States navigates an international trade ...
Ranchers hope President Donald Trump's tariffs will make imported beef expensive enough that Americans will turn to cattle ...
From the pasture to your grocery bill, researchers team up to make cattle more efficient. Their goal? Breed cattle that ...
Some cattle ranchers in the U.S. are bullish about the new tariffs on imported goods that President Donald Trump announced ...
Feedlot margins were estimated at about $471/head with the Choice steer prices at $208/cwt., a rather modest drop from the record peak of $213/cwt. three weeks ago.
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WVNS Bluefield on MSNHow local cattle farmers feel about the new tariffsWith a new 10 percent tariff on imported goods from foreign countries, local farmers are worried about the impact it may have ...
In Australia’s beef industry, there is relief that the 10% tariff President Trump imposed on Australian goods wasn’t any ...
One burning question hung in the air as analyst Simon Quilty strode onto the WagyuEdge conference stage in Perth on Thursday, ...
The U.S. is the largest beef producer in the world, and 11% of that production is exported — with upward of 500 million pounds of that beef going to China, which is now engaged in a high-stakes trade ...
But the man who speaks for Britain's livestock farmers insisted any imported US beef must pass the same tests as UK meat.
Ranchers hope President Donald Trump's tariffs will make imported beef expensive enough that Americans will turn to cattle raised at home for all their hamburger and steaks ...
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