Trump Tariff Cut May Ease Pain for US Coffee and Beef Lovers
Cattle eat at feed pens on a farm in Maraba, Para state, Brazil.
(Bloomberg) — US President Donald Trump’s decision to remove a key tariff on Brazilian coffee and beef may deliver some relief to markets and American consumers who have struggled with soaring prices for the key staples.
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Brazil is the top global supplier of both commodities, and a 40% tariff announced in July caused shipments into the US to slump. The resulting supply squeeze had aggravated a price surge for consumers already facing decades-high food inflation.
The executive order signed by Trump on Thursday is expected to ease that pressure. Last week, he cut a separate 10% duty off those products.
“Two-thirds of American adults drink coffee each day, and every cup will cost less thanks to President Trump’s decision to remove tariffs on coffee imports from Brazil,” the National Coffee Association said in a statement.
The decision, which includes a basket of commodities, reflects the need to bring down prices for food, as Americans have struggled under the strain of high grocery bills and given Trump increasingly poor marks over his handling of the economy. US consumer sentiment fell in November to one of the lowest levels on record as Americans’ views of their personal finances soured.
Futures for the premium arabica coffee dropped as much as 6.6% to an almost two-month low in New York on Friday, before paring declines. Arabica futures had risen to a record high in October as tariffs added to a shortage caused by lackluster harvests across the globe. An inflation index for roasted coffee surged to an all-time high in August, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
“We expect exports to resume,” said StoneX analyst Fernando Maximiliano. Fears of a shortage in the US market had pushed futures prices higher and now some relief is expected, he added.
Beef, meanwhile, has been a particularly thorny issue for the Trump administration, as consumer prices have soared to records amid a shrinking domestic cattle herd. The US has increasingly relied on foreign shipments to fill the gap, helping to send cattle prices diving on expectations for an influx. But Brazilian beef shipments have fallen sharply following tariff threats.
Live cattle futures dropped as much as 3.4% on Friday, to the lowest since June, before paring losses.

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