KEY POINTS
  • Rabobank said in a report it expects China's pork production to fall by 10% to 15% in 2020, on top of a 25% drop in 2019.
  • The country's pig herd fell by half in the first eight months of 2019, and will likely shrink by 55% by year end, it said.
  • China's total consumption of animal feed such as soy will drop by 17% in 2019 due to the decline in hogs, according to Rabobank.
Pigs raised by farmers are seen at Linquan county on December 5, 2018 in Fuyang, Anhui Province of China.

China's hog herd fell by half in the first eight months of 2019 due to a devastating outbreak of African swine fever and will likely shrink by 55% by the end of the year, analysts at Rabobank said on Wednesday.

The pace of herd losses will likely slow in the coming months due to reduced farm numbers and Chinese government measures to control the pig disease in the world's largest pork consumer, according to a report by Rabobank. However, the bank said relatively unstable market conditions will likely persist for the next three to five years.