Brazil’s agribusiness shipments to the United States fell 39.8% in September to $672.18 million, marking a sharp, one-month break in one of the hemisphere’s busiest food trade lanes.
America’s share of Brazil’s farm exports dropped to 4.5% from 7.9% a year earlier—evidence that buyers and sellers pulled back fast once costs and uncertainty rose.
The pain wasn’t even. Orange juice was largely spared. But flagship categories—pulp, green coffee, beef, and bovine tallow—took the hit.
The steepest value declines were in fresh beef (down $58.96 million), unmanufactured tobacco (down $48.11 million), raw cane sugar (down $47.2 million), green coffee (down $43.09 million), pulp (down $41.51 million), wood products (down $27.28 million), and plywood/veneers (down $18.21 million).
Put simply: the U.S. became a tougher market overnight for many of Brazil’s big farm exports. Yet the broader picture is more nuanced.
Momentum earlier in the year kept January–September agribusiness sales to the U.S. 7.6% higher year to date at $9.13 billion, leaving America as Brazil’s third-largest customer for farm goods.
Brazilian Exports Shift as U.S. Demand Slows
Exporters moved quickly to rebalance: beef volumes leaned more toward China, and parts of Europe picked up demand. Coffee tells a second story: Brazil shipped less green coffee to the U.S. in volume over the nine-month period, but earned more in revenue as international coffee prices surged.
Why this matters—wherever you live. For U.S. consumers, fewer Brazilian options or higher prices could show up in categories like coffee and beef.
In addition, for Brazilian producers, thinner margins and rerouted logistics mean tougher months ahead while contracts and shipping lanes are reset. For global buyers, this is a test of how resilient food supply chains are when a major trade corridor jolts.
What to watch next: how much of the displaced Brazilian supply can China and Europe absorb; whether coffee’s high prices keep offsetting lower volumes; and if the September pullback proves a one-off adjustment or the start of a longer, slower flow to the U.S. market.