Pork Bellies

Pork Bellies

A pork belly is the cut of pork that comes from the belly of a pig. Today pork producers and consumers still hedge some pork costs with CME’s lean hogs futures contract rather than pork bellies futures. While they were a major futures contract for decades, the declining popularity of pork bellies on trading platforms and bacon's growing year-round availability led the CME to a halt in trading in 2011. In addition to lean hog futures, other livestock futures traded on the CME include live cattle and feeder cattle futures. The futures contract in pork bellies pre-dates many financial futures contracts traded today.

Pork bellies are literally the cut of pork from the belly of a pig. For many Americans, they became an icon of futures trading.

What Are Pork Bellies?

A pork belly is the cut of pork that comes from the belly of a pig. Pork bellies were previously traded in the futures market, as they are an important source of meat products, particularly bacon. Trading in frozen pork belly futures began in 1961 on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and allowed meatpackers to hedge the volatile pig market. Over the decades, pork bellies and pork belly trading gained a certain mystique in the American imagination.

Pork bellies are literally the cut of pork from the belly of a pig. For many Americans, they became an icon of futures trading.
Pork belly futures were a pioneering financial instrument when they were introduced in 1961, but they were phased out in 2011 due to declining market interest and changes in the bacon market.

Pork Bellies Explained

Pork bellies became the iconic commodity for the futures market's representation in popular culture and have been mentioned in a variety of films relating to investing and trading, perhaps most famously in the 1983 comedy Trading Places, starring Eddie Murphy. While they were a major futures contract for decades, the declining popularity of pork bellies on trading platforms and bacon's growing year-round availability led the CME to a halt in trading in 2011.

The futures contract in pork bellies pre-dates many financial futures contracts traded today. Pork belly futures reached the peak of their popularity in the early 1980s, when they were also used to hedge consumer food inflation more generally.

Since the 1980s, the bacon business has changed, with consumers eating more pork year-round, requiring less need for cold storage and, so, less need to hedge the frozen meat for sale in the summertime. The reduced need to store frozen pork bellies directly contributed to the demise of the futures contract. Today pork producers and consumers still hedge some pork costs with CME’s lean hogs futures contract rather than pork bellies futures. In addition to lean hog futures, other livestock futures traded on the CME include live cattle and feeder cattle futures.

Pork Bellies Contracts

Currently, the CME lists Lean Hog (HE) futures, which represent the prices paid for live hogs, where each contract represents 40,000 pounds of meat. The contracts are quoted in cents per pound with a minimum tick size of $10.00. Lean Hog futures are cash-settled.

The CME also lists Pork Cutout (PRK) futures, also representing 40,000 pounds of meat, but representing the values paid lower down the meat supply chain, based on the cuts of meat sold to wholesalers and butchers. These, too, are cash-settled.

CME Fresh Bacon Index

The importance of bacon as a food product led the CME to introduce the CME Fresh Bacon Index in 2019. This index sets a weekly bacon price, for 20,000 pounds of fresh pork bellies, but there are no futures contracts or other trading instruments.

Related terms:

Cash Market

A cash market is a marketplace in which the commodities or securities purchased are paid for and received at the point of sale. read more

Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange or CME is a futures exchange which trades in interest rates, currencies, indices, metals, and agricultural products. read more

Commodity Market

A commodity market is a physical or virtual marketplace for buying, selling, and trading commodities. Discover how investors profit from the commodity market.  read more

Derivative

A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more

E-Mini

An E-mini S&P 500 is an electronically traded futures contract that is a fraction of the value of a standard futures contract. Read about E-mini investing here. read more

Futures Exchange

A futures exchange is a central marketplace, physical or electronic, where futures contracts and options on futures contracts are traded.  read more

Futures Market

A futures market is an exchange for trading futures contracts. Futures, unlike forwards, are listed on exchanges. read more

Hedge

A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more

Soft Commodity

A soft commodity is a grown agricultural commodity such as coffee, cocoa, sugar, and fruit. read more

Spot Market

The spot market is where financial instruments, such as commodities, currencies, and securities, are traded for immediate delivery.  read more