Beef Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Beef stocks.

Beef Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 24 WEN Wendy's (NASDAQ:WEN) Has Some Way To Go To Become A Multi-Bagger
Apr 23 BGS Albertsons (ACI) Q4 Earnings In Line, Sales Miss Estimates
Apr 23 TSN S&P 500 stocks with the biggest estimated EPS increase this season
Apr 23 HRL Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (PPC) Hit a 52 Week High, Can the Run Continue?
Apr 23 HRL Applegate Farms LLC Announces $50,000 Support American Farmland Trust's Brighter Future Fund
Apr 23 HRL With Summertime Parties on the Horizon, the Makers of the HORMEL GATHERINGS® Brand Introduce Summer-Themed Hard Salami & Pepperoni Tray
Apr 22 HRL Hormel: Hit The Fade And Look To Buy Below $25
Apr 22 HRL Is Freshpet (FRPT) Stock Outpacing Its Consumer Staples Peers This Year?
Apr 22 TSN Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights Tyson Foods, Hormel Foods and Pilgrim's Pride
Apr 22 HRL Zacks Industry Outlook Highlights Tyson Foods, Hormel Foods and Pilgrim's Pride
Apr 22 AGCO AGCO Agriculture Foundation Donates $450,000 AUD to Rural Aid Australia
Apr 21 AGCO 20 Countries with the Largest Rural Population in the World
Apr 21 HRL Best Stock to Buy Right Now: Beyond Meat vs. Hormel Foods
Apr 20 HRL 3 Stocks That Could Create Lasting Generational Wealth
Apr 19 AGCO AGCO Leader Wins 2024 Women MAKE Award
Apr 19 HRL 3 Meat Food Stocks Hogging in the Limelight on Robust Industry Trends
Apr 19 TSN 3 Meat Food Stocks Hogging in the Limelight on Robust Industry Trends
Apr 19 BGS The past three years for B&G Foods (NYSE:BGS) investors has not been profitable
Apr 19 BGS Inter Parfums (IPAR) Poised on Brand Strength, Expansion Efforts
Apr 19 AGCO Shareholders May Be More Conservative With AGCO Corporation's (NYSE:AGCO) CEO Compensation For Now
Beef

Beef is the culinary name for meat from cattle, particularly skeletal muscle. Humans have been eating beef since prehistoric times. Beef is a source of high-quality protein and nutrients.Beef skeletal muscle meat can be used as is by merely cutting into certain parts roasts, short ribs or steak (filet mignon, sirloin steak, rump steak, rib steak, rib eye steak, hanger steak, etc.), while other cuts are processed (corned beef or beef jerky). Trimmings, on the other hand, are usually mixed with meat from older, leaner (therefore tougher) cattle, are ground, minced or used in sausages. The blood is used in some varieties called blood sausage. Other parts that are eaten include other muscles and offal, such as the oxtail, liver, tongue, tripe from the reticulum or rumen, glands (particularly the pancreas and thymus, referred to as sweetbread), the heart, the brain (although forbidden where there is a danger of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, BSE, commonly referred to as mad cow disease), the kidneys, and the tender testicles of the bull (known in the United States as calf fries, prairie oysters, or Rocky Mountain oysters). Some intestines are cooked and eaten as is, but are more often cleaned and used as natural sausage casings. The bones are used for making beef stock.
Beef from steers and heifers is similar. Depending on economics, the number of heifers kept for breeding varies. The meat from older bulls, because it is usually tougher, is frequently used for mince (known as ground beef in the United States). Cattle raised for beef may be allowed to roam free on grasslands, or may be confined at some stage in pens as part of a large feeding operation called a feedlot (or concentrated animal feeding operation), where they are usually fed a ration of grain, protein, roughage and a vitamin/mineral preblend.
Beef is the third most widely consumed meat in the world, accounting for about 25% of meat production worldwide, after pork and poultry at 38% and 30% respectively. In absolute numbers, the United States, Brazil, and the People's Republic of China are the world's three largest consumers of beef; Uruguay, however, has the highest beef and veal consumption per capita, followed by Argentina and Brazil. According to the data from OECD, the average Uruguayan ate over 42 kg (93 lb) of beef or veal in 2014, representing the highest beef/veal consumption per capita in the world. In comparison, the average American consumed only about 24 kg (53 lb) beef or veal in the same year, while African countries, such as Mozambique, Ghana, and Nigeria, consumed the least beef or veal per capita.
Cows are considered sacred in Hinduism and most observant Hindus who do eat meat almost always abstain from beef.
In 2015, the world's largest exporters of beef were India, Brazil and Australia. Beef production is also important to the economies of Uruguay, Canada, Paraguay, Mexico, Argentina, Belarus and Nicaragua.

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