Australia: Rural Bank's rosy 2022 forecasts

Published 2021년 12월 13일

Tridge summary

Rural Bank predicts stable beef prices, increased production of beef, sheepmeat, wool, and dairy due to La Nina in 2022. Beef cattle prices are expected to flatten, with a 12% increase in Australian beef production. Wheat prices will remain high due to a global shortage of milling wheat, while chickpea demand and pricing are hampered by transport and supply chain issues. National milk production is expected to creep up, with flat global milk supply and strong export demand. Lamb prices are likely to continue the same long-term trend, with increased demand as international markets recover from the impacts of COVID-19.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Beef prices might steady a little, grain growers should do well despite wheat quality downgrades, dairy prices will stay high, lamb will be in demand and fine wool will be just that, fine. Those, in a nutshell, are the Rural Bank Australian Agriculture Outlook's predictions for 2022. While the bank's forecasts show some sectors are likely to be better off than others, they all have one theme in common: La Nina. The season would drive increased production of beef, sheepmeat, wool, dairy and production, making it more important than the pandemic recovery, trade conditions and supply chain disruptions. FLATTER CATTLE: Rural Bank expects beef cattle prices to flatten in the first half of 2022. The Eastern Young Cattle Indicator shot up two years ago and kept on breaking records. Rural Bank thinks that remarkable run might taper, with the curve flattening as local supply rebuilds. Australian beef production is expected to lift 12 per cent in the first half of 2022 as more cattle reach ...
Source: Farmweekly

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