Indian buffalo prices tumble, what that means for Aussie beef

Published Dec 13, 2021

Tridge summary

Indian buffalo meat prices have plummeted, impacting the global beef market as Brazil struggles in secondary markets. A dual global beef market with extreme high and low prices is emerging, potentially impacting Australia's live export sector and demand for boxed beef exports. The widening gap between U.S. beef export values and Indian buffalo highlights the importance of market access. Despite Russia allowing 200,000 tonnes of Brazilian beef at zero duty for six months, it is unlikely to significantly help Brazil. The price spread between low-grade and high-grade beef is expected to widen, with the rich paying more for high-end meat and the poor less for lower-grade meat.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

INDIAN buffalo meat prices have fallen off a cliff, creating waves of change in the global beef market as Brazil is forced to compete head-to-head in secondary markets. International meat market expert Simon Quilty says a two-tier global beef market of extreme high and low prices is emerging. The ramifications for Australia are likely to be felt the most in the live export sector, as demand is subdued in south-east Asian countries that have access to big flows of cheaper Brazilian product and Indian buffalo through 2022. Demand for boxed beef exports from Australia, New Zealand and the United States may also be affected - even though it is a distinctly different product to India's. Australia sent solid volumes of boxed beef to Indonesia this year, as overall consumption in that market grew. Mr Quilty also believes Australian imported values to the US could be affected by the flush of cheap Brazilian meat in the first half of next year but says the South American beef giant's quota ...

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