CHICAGO – Eating ham has never been more expensive than this year, partly because U.S. pigs are too fat.
Hogs in the U.S. weigh the most ever after farmers fed them longer to make up for losses caused by a virus that killed millions of piglets. While heavier hogs means more pork per animal, their hind legs exceed the size used for producing the 7-pound spiral-cut, half hams that are the most popular for family meals during year-end holidays.
Half of annual ham consumption by Americans occurs at Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners, and retail prices through October were up 26 percent this year to a record $3.433 a pound, government data show. The increase was fueled by the virus, which shrank the domestic herd and reduced the number of hogs slaughtered this year by 5.2 percent, boosting costs for meat buyers including Noodles & Co.
"This year has been a struggle for people that sell half hams because heavier hogs are coming to market," Brian Mariuz, chief financial officer of HoneyBaked Ham Co.'s Michigan division, said by telephone from Troy, Mich. The unit runs 74 of HoneyBaked's more than 400 U.S. stores. "Seven-pound hams are in the highest demand and in the lowest supply."
Meat processors slaughtered 92.09 million hogs this year through Nov. 15, down from 97.17 million in the same period a year earlier, after outbreaks of the deadly porcine epidemic diarrhea virus shrank domestic herds, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show. Even with hogs weighing a record 215.5 pounds each on average, pork output through September was down 1.2 percent to 16.71 billion pounds.
Minnesota is the nation's second-largest pork producer after Iowa, and home to two large pork processing plants: Hormel in Austin and JBS in Worthington.
State pollution officials estimate that the state has nearly 10 million pigs and hogs in more than 6,600 registered feedlots.
According to the National Pork Board, producers in Minnesota marketed 14 million hogs in 2011 and received gross income of nearly $2.5 billion. The total economic generation from Minnesota's pork production in 2011 was $6.9 billion.