Farm Tender

What to look out for in 2019 - Sheep

By Matt Dalgleish - Mecardo Blog.

In this series of blog articles, we’re taking a look back at the year that was for agricultural commodities and provide our insight for the year ahead.

This installment highlights 2018’s key movements in sheep and lamb markets and what to keep your eye on in 2019.

Dry conditions during the 2018 season saw the sheep offtake ratio climb back above the 12% thresh-hold during the middle of the year. The sheep offtake ratio measures the level of sheep turnoff into meatworks or live export as a proportion of the total flock expressed as a rolling 12- month average.

Historically, when the sheep offtake ratio lifts above 12% the flock numbers begin to decline. 2016 was a wet year and this allowed the offtake ratio to fall below 8% in mid-2017. Since then, seasonal conditions have been generally dry, so the sheep offtake has risen. Since July 2018 this rolling measure of offtake has been indicating downward pressure on the sheep flock by rising above 12%.

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Despite the reduction in the flock and higher slaughter levels due to the dry conditions sheep and lamb prices along the East coast have managed to maintain historically high levels during the 2018 season due to robust offshore demand, particularly for mutton out of the USA and China. Indeed, from June to December 2018, average monthly exports of Australian mutton to the USA have been 88% above the five-year average level and flows to China have been 70% higher.

 
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What to keep an eye on in 2019

Move to ban live sheep exports
During 2018 live sheep exports came under the microscope and flows ground to a halt during the northern hemisphere summer. The impact of reduced volumes of live sheep exported saw lamb and sheep prices in Western Australia stagnate, failing to follow East coast prices higher and limiting WA sheep producer’s revenues. A third of WA sheep turnoff goes to live export each year so the live trade is a crucial component of the WA sheep and lamb market, helping to underpin prices in the west.

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It is an election year in 2019 and the Australian Labour Party, along with several cross-bench senators, have indicated a preference to phase out live sheep exports. If those seeking to ban live sheep exports are successful it is likely just a matter of time before their target will shift toward other aspect of agriculture that they find distasteful. What will be their next target if they achieve success in banning live sheep exports? Banning intensive animal farming practices in the beef feedlot, pork, chicken and egg industries, banning long haul animal transport over land and/or any shipments of live animals overseas - including the sizeable live cattle trade? It’s a slippery slope and may extend to the use of glyphosate and GMO technology in cropping/horticulture or the practice of mulesing in the wool industry.

Reduction in NZ supply
Across the ditch the switch from sheep to cattle continues with Beef and Lamb NZ forecasting further growth in the beef herd at the expense of the sheep/lamb flock during the 2018 season and this is a pattern that isn’t expected to change as we head into 2019. The net result of the contraction in breeding ewes and lambs born will push the total sheep flock in NZ to a new low of 27.3 million head, or a decline of 0.8%.

In global export terms Australia and NZ supply around 70% of the market and in many of Australia’s key international markets NZ is our only real competitor. With NZ supply forecast to continue to decline the demand from offshore will need to find a source country to secure product and Australia is the obvious solution.

Growth in demand from developing world
OECD forecasts for the next five years suggest that demand for sheep meat from Asia is set to average a 2% growth rate, annually. While this doesn’t sound like much the trade into Asia was more than US$2.1 billion last season and 60% of global sheep/lamb exports are destined to head to Asian markets, so it represents a significant chunk.

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Asian demand for Australian sheep meat has supported the robust prices sheep producers have enjoyed during the 2018 season and with the NZ sheep industry shrinking there is a fair chance we will see growing Asian demand continue to support the Australian sheep/lamb sector as we progress through 2019.

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