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NZ beef, lamb and mutton prices fall

Published: Mon 18 Apr 2016 03:33 PM
Monday 18 April 2016 03:26 PM
NZ beef, lamb and mutton prices fall in first half of exporting season
By Jonathan Underhill
April 18 (BusinessDesk) - New Zealand export beef, lamb and mutton prices fell in the first half of the current season, which tapered off after a strong start.
Prices for beef and veal fell 2.5 percent to $7,350 a tonne in the six months ended March 31, while the volume of exports fell 3.7 percent to 204,200 tonnes, said Beef + Lamb NZ. The price of lamb fell 4.2 percent to $8,500 a tonne as volume climbed 5.9 percent to 162,700 tonnes. Mutton prices fell 10 percent to $4,800 as volume rose 0.5 percent to 51,200 tonnes.
Beef + Lamb said the price decline would have been worse if not for a weaker kiwi dollar.
The drop in beef volumes was driven by a decline in frozen shipments while chilled beef volumes were unchanged from a year earlier. Volumes were skewed to the first quarter when a 55 percent increase in exports to North Asia was followed by a 5.5 percent gain in the second quarter. Exports to North America fell 15 percent in the first half of the season, although most of the drop-off was in the second quarter.
Lamb shipments to North Asia climbed 11 percent and product sent to the European Union rose 7.2 percent, partly offset by a decline of about 33 percent in exports to the Middle East. Chilled lamb exports rose 12 percent in the first six months of the season while frozen lamb exports fell 3.6 percent. Of total shipments, 29 percent was chilled, up from 27 percent in the first half of last year's season.
Shipments of mutton to North Asia, the nation's biggest market for the meat, fell 9.4 percent while exports rose to the EU, South Asia and North America. North Asia also recorded the biggest decline in value, Beef + Lamb said.
(BusinessDesk)
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