The feds have been quietly looking at the biggest beef firms in the U.S. for months. On Monday, the DOJ made it official.
What Blanche Said
Blanche confirmed the probe at a press event. He said the DOJ has read over 3 million files and talked with hundreds of ranchers, cattle hands, growers, and meat plants.
He pointed to plant closures, the shape of the market, and high control by the top firms as red flags for the case.
He also noted that two of the Big Four are foreign-owned. JBS USA is a unit of Brazil's JBS S.A. National Beef is mostly owned by another Brazilian firm, Marfrig.
That foreign-ownership detail will matter, with the White House making U.S. food and trade a steady talking point.
Who The Big Four Are
The four biggest beef firms handle 85% of all steer and heifer purchases in the U.S., per the USDA.
They are JBS, Cargill, Tyson Foods, and National Beef. They have been a target of farm groups and politicians for years.
Ranchers say the Big Four use shared price benchmarks that get gamed. The result shows up at the meat counter every time shoppers buy ground beef.
Tyson Foods and JBS both trade on U.S. exchanges, with JBS adding a NYSE dual listing in June 2025. Cargill is private, and National Beef is owned by Brazil's Marfrig.
Beef prices have been a sore spot for shoppers. Ground beef hit fresh highs last year, and any sign of price-fixing tied to the Big Four would be a hot political topic.
This Isn't The First Probe
The DOJ ran a similar look in 2020 during the pandemic. According to a Bloomberg report cited at the press event, that probe was closed last year with no charges.
President Trump asked the DOJ to reopen the case in November. The same day, former AG Pam Bondi confirmed it on X.
Blanche has now made it public again, after months of quiet work.
He also teased a bigger move this week. The DOJ will share a "historic settlement" tied to chicken, pork, and turkey. The deal links back to a 2023 lawsuit against data firm Agri Stats, which is accused of helping rivals share pricing data.
What To Watch
Peter Navarro, a top White House aide, said the new poultry deal will ripple through the meat trade. He said the move will hit prices fast.
If that's true, the beef case could land even harder.
For investors, the most important reads are Tyson Foods and JBS. Any sign of charges or a settlement frame is likely to move both stocks before the rest of the trade.
A second item to watch is the legal angle. The DOJ has not said if the case is civil or criminal, and that will matter for how hard the case bites.
For shoppers, the story is simpler. If the case finds price-fixing, beef prices could come down at the meat counter over time.
The next big date to watch is later this week. That is when Blanche has said the DOJ will roll out the chicken, pork, and turkey deal.
If that case lands hard, the beef one is likely to follow the same path.
