Market will cope with extra lambs

The market should be able to cope with the expected one million more lambs this season, suggests meat industry commentator Allan Barber.

Responding to recently released figures from B+LNZ Ltd’s Economic Service Barber points out that last year’s 4.4 percent reduction led sheep numbers to an all time low and that this season saw a bounceback of 2.6 percent, largely from an increase in ewe hoggets.

“Providing adverse weather doesn’t cause larger than anticipated lamb losses, there is every reason to expect one million more lambs on the ground this season,” he suggests, adding that this will prompt the question as to whether the markets can absorb the extra lambs, given the flat state of most overseas economies and the significant amount of inventory clogging up the pipeline.

“Past experience suggests that the pipeline will free up, so buyers will hopefully start to place orders again in the not too distant future. In addition, the growth last season meant that farmers held back stock and continued to put weight on. At the same time, meat exporters failed to give the right market signals soon enough, because they had to keep prices high to secure throughput,” explains Barber.

“Assuming the law of climatic averages reasserts itself, the coming season will return to more normal conditions. Therefore, the conflicting messages of procurement and market price will not be so far out of kilter again and supply and demand will be more complementary.

“If not, we will have to pray for an outbreak of rational behaviour from producers and processors!”

Barber notes that the changing nature of land use in New Zealand can be seen from the fact that the North Island is now home to more sheep than the South Island for the first time in living memory. At the same time, the South Island, assisted by irrigation, now has 35 percent of the country’s dairy cows, “a proportion which was inconceivable 15 years ago,” he says.

 

Stock numbers holding

The good pastoral production year has seen New Zealand sheep numbers increase by 2.6 percent and beef cattle numbers increase by one percent for the year to 30 June 2012, according to Beef + Lamb NZ Ltd’s Economic Service.

“This partly makes up for the 4.4 percent decline in sheep and 2.6 percent decline in beef cattle the year before,” says executive director Rob Davison.

B+LNZ’s annual stock number survey, which establishes the productive base of livestock for 2012-2013 shows that while sheep numbers were up 2.6 percent most of this increased will be stock carried over for slaughter in July-September.

Ewe condition is good across the country, he noted. “Scanning results for most regions show in-lamb ewes are carrying more multiple lambs with the general comment that scanning percentages are up five to 10 percent on last year. All we need now is an excellent sprint to ensure high survival of the lambs born.”

The scanning results lead to expectations that the 2012 lamb crop could be up on last Spring by one million lambs (+ four percent). This outcome would lift the ewe flock performance measured by lambing percentage to around the highest achieved, which in 2009-2010 was 123 percent. There is potential to exceed this performance level, Davison says. Each one percentage point change in lambing percentage, equates to about 200,000 lambs.

 

 

 

 

 

Great pastoral conditions along with continuing good prices

Photo: Courtesy B+LNZ

Beef + Lamb NZ’s mid-season update for the sheep and beef sector reports that export receipts estimated at $6.6 billion hold at last year’s level. Last year, export receipts for the sector were up 15 percent.

Expectations are for a small lift in export volumes and continued good prices relative to recent years. This will be moderated by the strength of the New Zealand dollar, particularly against the Euro and British pound.

The report contained few surprises for B+LNZ Economic Service director Rob Davison, who says it’s rare for such good pastoral conditions and international prices  to align. Lamb prices are expected to average at $115 a head, slightly down on 2010-2011’s high. Offshore prices are expected to remain at good levels, though the stronger NZ dollar against the pound softens the price received here. The recent strengthening of the NZ dollar against its US counterpart is also a concern, Davison says.

Global mutton supplies remain tight, while beef exports are expected to lift in the 2011-2012 season which ends in June.