- China renewed import permits for hundreds of U.S. beef processing plants on Thursday — valid for five years — as the Trump-Xi Beijing summit yielded its first concrete agricultural trade concession.
- U.S. beef exports to China collapsed ~67% between 2024 and 2025 after Beijing let American meat plant authorizations lapse during the tariff war; organ meat prices fell nearly 40% as a result.
- Corn and soybean purchase agreements are also expected to be announced as part of the summit’s agricultural trade revival package.
- The beef permit renewal squeezes Brazil, Australia, and Argentina — who have been filling China’s beef import quota — as U.S. suppliers are positioned to take a larger share of the world’s biggest beef market.
What Happened?
China’s customs authority quietly renewed five-year import licenses for hundreds of U.S. beef processing plants on Thursday, as President Trump and Xi Jinping held their first full day of summit meetings in Beijing. The move, confirmed by people with direct knowledge of the matter, reverses a deliberate policy Beijing put in place last year: allowing American meat plant authorizations to expire as a retaliatory measure during the escalating tariff war. The consequences were severe — U.S. beef and related product exports to China dropped roughly 67% year-over-year between 2024 and 2025, with organ meats (a high-value export with little domestic U.S. demand) seeing price collapses of nearly 40%, according to the Meat Institute.
Why It Matters?
The beef permit renewal is the most tangible early deliverable from the Beijing summit and signals that both sides are serious about unwinding at least some agricultural trade damage from the tariff war. Additional announcements on Chinese purchases of U.S. corn and soybeans are expected before Trump departs Friday. For American cattle and meatpacking industries — already under pressure from a severe domestic cattle shortage — regaining access to China’s enormous beef market is a meaningful lifeline. The move also reshuffles global meat trade flows: Brazil is already near its annual China beef quota, while Australia and Argentina have been the primary beneficiaries of U.S. exclusion. U.S. suppliers are now positioned to reclaim market share.
What’s Next?
Watch for formal announcements of corn, soybean, and potentially LNG purchase commitments as the summit concludes Friday. The deeper question is whether these agricultural concessions represent a genuine thaw or a narrow, summit-specific package that leaves the broader tariff architecture intact. Beijing has domestic political reasons to cap beef import volumes — Chinese producers are grappling with oversupply and weak consumption, and import quotas protect them. The permit renewals open the door; how much U.S. beef actually flows through it will depend on price competitiveness and quota politics in the months ahead.
Source: Bloomberg











