Credit squeeze hits
meat exports
LUCY SKUTHORP
farmonline - The Land -
6/11/2008 2:23:00 PM
The real hurt from the global financial crisis might just be
starting to hit agribusiness, with reports beef and lamb exports are starting
to pile up at some international ports because importers can’t afford to pay.
Stories are trickling back to
Farmers are being told the “fundamentals” for agriculture
are still strong because food demand and a lower Australian dollar should help
keep the sector buoyant during this turmoil.
Yet credit freezes and a slump in consumer confidence
overseas could whack key rural commodities in the next few months – leaving
exporters and farmers severely out of pocket.
Weakening export demand is partly behind a price fall in
cattle prices which are now down 10 to 15 per cent from their peaks in
September, with the benchmark Eastern Young Cattle Indicator falling from 362
cents a kilogram (carcase weight) at the start of
last month to 326c/kg yesterday.
The trade lamb indicator has dropped from a mid-August high
of 469c/kg to 345c/kg last week.
The same slumps can be seen across most other commodities,
with wool’s eastern market indicator shedding between 110c/kg and 150c/kg clean
in the past month, while canola, wheat, cotton, dairy and barley have all seen
losses.
Source:The
Land, NSW, November 6
theland.farmonline.com.au