Why Cyber Insurance Is Critical for Feedyards & Cattle Producers
Why Cyber Insurance Is Critical for Feedyards & Cattle Producers
$10 million dollars.
That is what our customers in the agriculture industry have lost this year alone to cyber claims.
Invoice manipulation on feed bills sent to customers. Masked phone calls that trick employees into giving away bank information. Hacked emails delivering fraudulent wiring instructions that look legitimate in every way. These are not theoretical scenarios or issues happening “somewhere else.” These are real claims affecting real feedyards, cattle operations, and ag businesses. Costing them not only their own money, but in many cases, their customers’ money as well.
When most people think about claims in a feedyard, they picture a loader catching fire, wind or hail damage to a feed mill, or a structure loss from severe weather. Those risks are very real and very familiar. But one of the fastest‑growing and most underestimated threats facing agriculture today doesn’t involve fire, wind, or livestock at all.
It involves cybercrime.
The Growing Threat to Agriculture
Hackers are no longer focused solely on large corporations or national brands. In fact, small and mid‑sized agricultural businesses have become prime targets. Why? Because they often lack the robust cybersecurity systems and internal controls that larger organizations have in place.
Feedyards and cattle producers handle sensitive information every day; banking details, customer accounts, payroll data, vendor invoices, and proprietary operational records. A single compromised email account or fraudulent phone call can expose that information and open the door to significant financial loss.
Cybercriminals are also becoming more sophisticated. They study workflows, impersonate trusted vendors, and time their attacks to coincide with busy seasons. The result is a convincing scheme that causes even experienced employees to unknowingly “authorize” a fraudulent payment.
Financial and Operational Impact
The financial consequences of a cyber incident can be immediate and severe. Businesses may face direct losses from stolen funds, ransom demands, or unrecoverable payments. In some cases, legal expenses and regulatory costs follow close behind.
But the damage doesn’t stop with dollars lost.
System lockouts and compromised software can disrupt critical operations such as feed inventory tracking, billing, payroll, and market transactions. Even short periods of downtime can create ripple effects across the operation. Perhaps most damaging of all is the erosion of trust. When customers’ funds are impacted, relationships built over years can be strained in a matter of days.
Cyber claims today are less about hackers “breaking in” and more about deception. Social engineering, invoice manipulation, and fraudulent wiring instructions are designed to convince people to voluntarily send money, making recovery even more difficult.
Why Cyber Insurance Matters
Many ag businesses believe they are covered because their package policy includes some form of cyber coverage. Unfortunately, those coverages are often limited and do not address the most common cyber losses seen in agriculture today.
Critical protections, such as coverage for social engineering, invoice manipulation, funds transfer fraud, and client funds which are frequently excluded or sub‑limited unless specifically added. Without the right cyber policy in place, a business may discover too late that a six‑figure loss is not covered.
Cyber insurance is not just about paying a claim. It often provides access to specialists who help investigate the incident, manage communications, and minimize long‑term damage.
A Strategic Investment in Your Operation
Think of cyber insurance the same way you think about insuring your livestock against disease or your equipment against physical damage. It is a strategic part of a comprehensive risk management plan.
In today’s ag industry, data and digital systems are just as critical as physical assets. Protecting them is no longer optional. Whether you operate a family ranch or manage a large feedyard, cyber coverage helps ensure your business can withstand modern threats and continue serving customers with confidence.
Cyber risk may be invisible, but the losses are not.
May 2026
By Specialty Risk Insurance









