Brazilian exports of raw bovine hides to Togo rose from US$ 204,672 in 2023 to US$ 2.18 million in 2025, accumulating a nearly 10-fold gain in two years.
Togo was not on Brazil's raw leather radar three years ago. Today it receives US$ 2.18 million worth of raw bovine hides and skins, a flow that grew nearly 10 times between 2023 and 2025. The pace of expansion surprises even close sector observers. In 2023, the country received US$ 204,672 in Brazilian shipments. Modest, within the normal range for emerging African markets. The following year, volume jumped to US$ 971,665 — a more than 3-fold rise in the first leg. In 2025, the flow crossed the US$ 2 million mark, adding a further +49% on an already elevated base.
What makes this movement different from a one-off spike is consistency. Three consecutive years of growth, with strong acceleration in the initial two-year stretch. In raw-commodity trade, that pattern signals structural demand — not just a spot contract that renews once. Raw hides (SH4 4101) are tannery feedstock. Togo has historically served as a re-export hub for West African landlocked markets , Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, where local leather and footwear industries have been growing without sufficient domestic slaughter infrastructure to meet demand.
Brazil holds the world's largest commercial cattle herd. That translates into structural raw-hide supply that needs an outlet. The domestic market absorbs some, but local tanning capacity has not kept pace with slaughter growth. The raw surplus pressures domestic prices and creates a consistent export incentive.
North America and Asia , especially China and Vietnam , historically absorb the bulk of Brazilian hide exports. Togo emerging as a meaningful destination is a recent development. It may reflect genuine channel diversification, not simple route substitution.
US$ 2.18 million is still small relative to Brazil's total hide exports, which run in the hundreds of millions of dollars annually. But the growth rate catches the eye of any portfolio-concentration analyst.
Raw hides follow the cattle slaughter cycle. In Brazil, slaughter peaks between August and November, meaning the primary supply window for raw hides concentrates in the second half of the year. Exporters shipping to Togo should align contract windows to this seasonal availability , attempting to source in the first quarter typically means higher spot prices or constrained volumes. Buyers on the African side who build inventories ahead of the lean season tend to secure better CIF terms.
Hub markets like Togo carry a known fragility: demand can collapse quickly if the ultimate destination country closes its border, imposes tariffs, or if local production scales up. Concentration risk in a single African intermediary warrants monitoring.
Raw hides are also inherently perishable. Refrigerated or salt-cured logistics add cost on long routes. The Brazil–Togo distance (across the Atlantic) raises CIF costs and compresses margins , particularly during periods of unfavorable exchange rates for the exporter.
Real appreciation against the dollar in parts of 2024–2025 may also have pressured the competitiveness of shipments. That factor is invisible in FOB data but real for the Togolese importer buying in dollars.
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