It was a steady week for lamb prices, despite an impressive jump in yardings last week, supply seems to be matching demand. Mutton prices made a move upwards however, particularly in Victoria where the market was generally stronger.
Lamb returned to yards in leaps and bounds in the week ending the 5th of February 2021. Compared to the shortened Australia day week, east coast lamb yardings were 140% higher. With 245,441 head yarded, this was the highest yarding for this time of the year that we have on record (27% above the five-year seasonal average).
Victoria and South Australia were responsible for much of the spike, where the number of lambs yarded was 71% above the five-year average in VIC and 63% above in SA.
While the lift in sheep yardings week on week was also significant, last weeks tally was still 11% below the five-year seasonal average. Some more kill space opened up for mutton last week and prices this week are reflective of that stronger demand. The National Mutton Indicator gained 26¢ to sit at 633¢/kg cwt. In Victoria mutton was 44¢ dearer by the end of the week with the indicator at 655¢/kg cwt, which is just below NSW at 657¢/kg cwt.
The Eastern States Trade Lamb Indicator tracked sideways, down just 1¢ to 847¢/kg cwt. Heavy and light lambs each gained 6¢ on the week while re-stocker lambs were fairly steady.
We touched on lamb export demand earlier in the week and the below average volumes in January (view here). With the dollar appreciating another 1% this week, it certainly isn’t doing any favours for our export markets. The ESTLI in USD is 657¢/kg cwt which is 7% higher than the same time last year.
The week ahead….
Lamb prices have been quite steady for a few weeks now, and it appears that even the swings in yardings aren’t shifting the price level of the market.
In mid-2022 Mecardo looked at the international supply of sheep meat (albeit from a limited number of countries) showing how lower supply had positively correlated
A short week, and closed saleyards on Thursday has culminated in some relief on the supply front as combined lamb and sheep yardings nationally dropped
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Join the Mecardo team for the Commodity Conversations podcast, where we provide short weekly market recaps and longer conversations with guests to discuss the drivers and trends in livestock, grain and fibre markets.
In this report for LiveCorp and MLA, we analysed the historical trends in the demographics of the Australian sheep flock, examining domestic factors that influence farm-level enterprise decision making.
We don’t just bring you the most up to date market insights. Find out more about Mecardo’s services including risk management advisory, modelling, benchmarking, research & consultancy.
Price unshaken by an influx at the yards
Lamb returned to yards in leaps and bounds in the week ending the 5th of February 2021. Compared to the shortened Australia day week, east coast lamb yardings were 140% higher. With 245,441 head yarded, this was the highest yarding for this time of the year that we have on record (27% above the five-year seasonal average).
Victoria and South Australia were responsible for much of the spike, where the number of lambs yarded was 71% above the five-year average in VIC and 63% above in SA.
While the lift in sheep yardings week on week was also significant, last weeks tally was still 11% below the five-year seasonal average. Some more kill space opened up for mutton last week and prices this week are reflective of that stronger demand. The National Mutton Indicator gained 26¢ to sit at 633¢/kg cwt. In Victoria mutton was 44¢ dearer by the end of the week with the indicator at 655¢/kg cwt, which is just below NSW at 657¢/kg cwt.
The Eastern States Trade Lamb Indicator tracked sideways, down just 1¢ to 847¢/kg cwt. Heavy and light lambs each gained 6¢ on the week while re-stocker lambs were fairly steady.
We touched on lamb export demand earlier in the week and the below average volumes in January (view here). With the dollar appreciating another 1% this week, it certainly isn’t doing any favours for our export markets. The ESTLI in USD is 657¢/kg cwt which is 7% higher than the same time last year.
The week ahead….
Lamb prices have been quite steady for a few weeks now, and it appears that even the swings in yardings aren’t shifting the price level of the market.
Have any questions or comments?
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Click on graph to expand
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Data sources: MLA, Mecardo
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Have any questions or comments?
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Independent analysis and outlook for wool, livestock and grain markets delivered to you as it’s published
Listen to the podcast
Join the Mecardo team for the Commodity Conversations podcast, where we provide short weekly market recaps and longer conversations with guests to discuss the drivers and trends in livestock, grain and fibre markets.
Research: Analysis of the Australian sheep flock
In this report for LiveCorp and MLA, we analysed the historical trends in the demographics of the Australian sheep flock, examining domestic factors that influence farm-level enterprise decision making.
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We don’t just bring you the most up to date market insights. Find out more about Mecardo’s services including risk management advisory, modelling, benchmarking, research & consultancy.