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Episode 3 explains what Trump's tariffs could mean for cattle, sheep prices
Farm Online
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3/11/2025
Episode 3 director Matt Dalgleish discussed the potential impact of Trump's agricultural tariffs on Australian cattle and sheep prices with national beef writer Shan Goodwin.
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00:00
As Australian red meat exporters wait to hear whether they'll be hit by a 25%
00:04
tariff that the US President is rolling out on agriculture imports, Economist Episode 3
00:10
have run some analyses looking at the level of exposure each state of Australia has.
00:16
Matt Dalgleish is here to tell us what it showed.
00:19
Yeah, so anyone that looks at those export markets, whether it's sheep meat or beef,
00:22
would probably know we're about a third of our exports go to the US, give or take,
00:28
in any given year. But when you start to look at the individual states,
00:31
there actually was quite a reasonable spread, particularly in the beef space,
00:34
if we start there. You had the WA market was about 14% of their export,
00:40
value of their exports go to the US, whereas the statewide Tasmania was actually closer to 80%,
00:46
which is quite a bit of distribution between the two. I guess geographically it makes sense
00:51
with the Western Australian continent being the other side, further away from the US,
00:56
and the eastern seaboard being closer. So that makes sense. And things like there's a grass-fed
01:01
program that two of the Tasmanian avatars run specifically, and we have seen that grass-fed
01:06
sector in the US particularly growing over the last few years. That kind of consumer there that
01:11
wanted to have a beef product that has maybe slightly higher sustainable credentials, I guess,
01:16
in the consumer's mind, whether that's accurate or not is another story. And then when you come
01:21
to the mainland, most of the key states like Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria were in
01:26
between that 20% to 35% level. I think New South Wales was about 20%, Queensland 23%, and Victoria
01:34
was about 36% in terms of their exposures. So yeah, that's how the beef kind of situation
01:39
stacked up. And that's a reasonable amount of exposure, even at that 30%, 20% or 30% level.
01:45
Oh yes, yes, absolutely. Especially for the country's biggest cattle state, Queensland. I
01:50
mean, that is a lot of beef still, isn't it? What about sheep side of thing? How do the states
01:56
stack up there? Yeah, so again, a reasonable distribution, not quite as wide in terms of
02:01
the states, but you had again, WA was the lower one at 10%. And then South Australia actually was
02:07
the highest for sheep meat at 48%. And for beef, South Australia was about 49%. So actually,
02:13
I was quite surprised to see South Australia was quite exposed on both beef and sheep meat being
02:19
close to that 50% mark of their exports going to the US, given that little bit further away from
02:26
the US side of the continent. Yes, absolutely. And of course, Matt,
02:31
the reason we're so interested in the US at the moment is the big volumes, particularly of beef
02:36
that we've been sending over there. And the fact that that's providing a pretty solid foundation
02:42
for our cattle market at the moment. How do you see cattle prices tracking in the next few months?
02:48
Yeah, it definitely has been supporting the market. That's been the case for probably a
02:52
year and a half or more now. And they moved to being our top destination about that time too.
02:57
So they've kind of outcompeted Japan. And more recently now, China's actually
03:02
pushed Japan into third spot. So we're seeing a bit of a change of demographic there. But that
03:07
US, the really tight supply we're seeing in the US, the cattle herds down, I think the lowest now
03:12
since 1951. So some 75, 76 years, we haven't seen their cattle herd this low. So I think that kind
03:22
of level of tightness of supply is going to persist. And they're still in a liquidation
03:27
phase now as far as the data I look at shows. We're probably slowly moving toward the rebuild
03:33
there. But it's probably it's going to be, I think, at least six to nine months before we go
03:36
into the real full rebuild phase. It's still very dry in a number of cattle producing states
03:42
and regions in America, isn't it? That's right. So we need, yeah,
03:46
and certainly the prices are starting to try and encourage a move towards rebuild. And we are
03:50
seeing some early signs, but we're probably not there yet. I think, yeah, like I said, I think we
03:55
might get there either late this year or early next year. But then even if we do flick into that
04:00
rebuilding in the US, given how much they've been drawing down on their supply, that it's going to
04:05
take a couple of years to get back up and full production levels. So I think that's going to
04:10
continue to support Australian pricing this year and into next year as well, at a minimum. I mean,
04:16
obviously, if we don't get a very good autumn break in the south, that might be a bit problematic.
04:21
But I think, yeah, given the gap in the US market for beef protein, particularly, I think even if
04:28
we have a bit of an extended dry spell here in the south, it's probably still going to carry
04:33
our pricing reasonably well. And I expect pricing to continue to climb as we head towards winter.
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