Advertisment

Beef

14 August, 2025

Beef producers hold firm

AUSTRALIAN beef producers are showing resilience and strategic patience in the face of market and seasonal challenges.


Beef producers hold firm - feature photo

The latest Beef Producer Intentions Survey from Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA), conducted between July 1 and 17, provided a mid-year update to the full survey conducted in April.

It captured producer sentiment and actual outcomes across herd management, calving and cattle sales.

The survey received responses from 1,295 grassfed beef producers nationwide and found that 84 per cent of producers indicated their intentions had remained the same since April 2025.

Only 16 per cent reported a change from the previous survey, with six per cent now planning to reduce their herd, seven per cent opting to maintain herd size, and three per cent intending to increase.

MLA’s marketing information analyst, Emily Tan, said the level of consistency in herd planning reflected a cautious but deliberate approach from producers.

“Producers are watching the market closely and making decisions that position them well given them market conditions,” Ms Tan said.

Autumn calving outcomes slightly exceeded expectations, with producers reporting 2.43 million calves delivered.

This was up from the April forecast of 2.39 million calves.

While 38 per cent of producers delivered fewer calves than expected, 32 per cent delivered more and 29 per cent met their forecast.

However, cattle sales in the first half of 2025 fell short of expectations.

Actual sales totalled 4.04 million head, down from the April forecast of 4.82 million.

Nearly half of producers (46 per cent) sold fewer cattle than planned.

“Many producers are holding cattle back, either because they don’t meet weight targets or because they’re anticipating stronger prices later in the year,” Ms Tan said.

“This aligns with broader industry sentiment that suggests producers are waiting for the right moment to re-enter the market.”

Among those who sold fewer cattle than expected, 42 per cent sited weight issues and 21 per cent pointed to price forecasts as key reasons.

Conversely, producers who sold more than expected were driven by stronger-than-anticipated prices (33 per cent), the need for cash flow (29 per cent) and efforts to reduce feeding costs (25 per cent).

“These results show producers are being tactical,” Ms Tan said.

“They’re balancing short-term pressures with long-term opportunities, and that’s a sign of confidence in the future.”

The Beef Producer Intentions Survey was designed by MLA to support the industry with reliable data.

It is used by MLA and the Bureau of Statistics (ABS) and is one of the inputs into the MLA beef industry forecasting models.

Advertisment

Most Popular