Volatile supply is the norm for livestock markets in April due to the public holidays and producers looking to the sky for the autumn break in their region. The early, widespread rains certainly kicked the market into gear, but in the week so far some of the price rally has been lost.
As American soul legend Wilson Pickett said “don’t let the green grass fool you”. Restockers have heeded these words and weren’t pulled into the rain driven price rally. A cautious approach appears to have taken hold, with trading opportunities limited, as Angus Brown analysed on Mecardo earlier in the week (view here). Looking at the Wednesday Indicator prices published by Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA), the Restocker lamb indicator in NSW was at 984¢ and 900¢ in Victoria, both lower than last weeks close.
The Eastern States Trade Lamb Indicator held most of last week’s gain, falling 9¢ to 841¢/kg cwt. The National Heavy Lamb Indicator at 808¢, is 17¢ lower than where it left off. The West Australian Trade Lamb Indicator, at 704¢/kg cwt on Wednesday, has also corrected from recent highs.
The big east coast rain event had the affect we all expected on yardings. 153,354 lambs were yarded on the east coast last week which was an 11% drop on the week prior and 7% under the five-year seasonal average. Sheep throughput also fell, down 24% on the week prior. MLA also reported on early yardings figures (Monday-Wednesday) for this week, showing just 121,566 lambs yarded in east coast yards, and 48,587 sheep.
There was no sign of disruptions in getting lamb to slaughter last week. In fact, lamb slaughter increased by 1% in the east, taking up some of the space created by fewer head of sheep processed (down 18% week on week).
The week ahead….
Another short week is in store next week due to Monday’s public holiday. With the seasonal fortunes shining on the east coast, autumn kill numbers are likely to stay tight and continue to support prices.
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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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.
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.
Don’t let the green grass fool ewe
As American soul legend Wilson Pickett said “don’t let the green grass fool you”. Restockers have heeded these words and weren’t pulled into the rain driven price rally. A cautious approach appears to have taken hold, with trading opportunities limited, as Angus Brown analysed on Mecardo earlier in the week (view here). Looking at the Wednesday Indicator prices published by Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA), the Restocker lamb indicator in NSW was at 984¢ and 900¢ in Victoria, both lower than last weeks close.
The Eastern States Trade Lamb Indicator held most of last week’s gain, falling 9¢ to 841¢/kg cwt. The National Heavy Lamb Indicator at 808¢, is 17¢ lower than where it left off. The West Australian Trade Lamb Indicator, at 704¢/kg cwt on Wednesday, has also corrected from recent highs.
The big east coast rain event had the affect we all expected on yardings. 153,354 lambs were yarded on the east coast last week which was an 11% drop on the week prior and 7% under the five-year seasonal average. Sheep throughput also fell, down 24% on the week prior. MLA also reported on early yardings figures (Monday-Wednesday) for this week, showing just 121,566 lambs yarded in east coast yards, and 48,587 sheep.
There was no sign of disruptions in getting lamb to slaughter last week. In fact, lamb slaughter increased by 1% in the east, taking up some of the space created by fewer head of sheep processed (down 18% week on week).
The week ahead….
Another short week is in store next week due to Monday’s public holiday. With the seasonal fortunes shining on the east coast, autumn kill numbers are likely to stay tight and continue to support prices.
Have any questions or comments?
Click on graph to expand
Click on graph to expand
Click on graph to expand
Data sources: MLA, NLRS, 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.