sign up log in
Want to go ad-free? Find out how, here.

On farm lamb sales and stock trader role queried

Rural News
On farm lamb sales and stock trader role queried

Parts of the meat sector strategy report question the value of on farm lamb sales and third party traders who deal with the works on a headage basis.

The argument made is such sales do not return to the breeder good market information to give him direction for future breeding decisions.

Third party traders also came under fire as just another cost clipping the ticket and not adding value, as did farm advisors.

What are your views on the use of agents to procure livestock for processing companies and do you believe farm advisors only add costs not value?

On-farm store lamb sales and the role of stock traders are being questioned by a meat sector strategy report for adding costs and little value to the meat industry. The report for Beef and Lamb NZ, by accountant and business consultant Deloitte, identifies the established practices of on-farm store lamb sales and third party traders as breaking the flow of market information from market to farm while adding costs and little value.

Chairman Mike Petersen said the role of third party traders had been raised by many during the collation of the report, particularly by farmers. They had also questioned whether farm advisers and stock and station agents were adding value or adding to costs. The red meat sector strategy is expected to be released in early January before public consultation meetings later that month and early February.

Mr Petersen said while some in the sector were profitable, there were opportunities to improve the performance in every part of the supply chain, especially if an activity was blurring communication between farmers and the market and adding costs to the industry while contributing little."If pieces in the chain keep breaking the flow of information, farmers can't produce the product the market wants." Headage payments made by meat companies to traders for animals supplied distorted the market and was not market-based, he said.

The Otago Daily Times has been contacted by a farmer angry at comments by Alliance Group chief executive Grant Cuff, who accused stock agents and traders of clipping the ticket in the supply of lambs between farmers and meat companies while adding little value. This was particularly pertinent this year because the lamb kill could be less than 20 million. The farmer, who asked to be anonymous because of his role in the industry, said one reason stock agents could do that was because those paid on commission had deals with meat companies in which they were given headage payments and killing space.

Because of these arrangements, he said commission stock agents were able to make substantial incomes, often at the expense of farmers who paid commission to an agent only to have the stock sent straight to a meat company or grazing, for which the agent was given a commission or headage payment.

 

We welcome your comments below. If you are not already registered, please register to comment.

Remember we welcome robust, respectful and insightful debate. We don't welcome abusive or defamatory comments and will de-register those repeatedly making such comments. Our current comment policy is here.

2 Comments

I was recently talking to a store lamb farmer.

Historically,his stock agent comes in and gives him a price,and the lambs go somewhere else.

He doesn't know as to whether he is getting the best deal,or whether the next person is.

He said that he and two of his neighbours were thinking about combining and having a store lamb sale this year.

I told him to go for it.

With the shortgage of lambs this year,he has to look after himself.

At an auction,everyone gets a crack at it.

Auctions are the way to go when there is a lack of supply.

What a lot of bollocks to talk about breaking the flow of market information.

Store lamb farms are up against the wall.

They need to get the most they can out of what they sell.

How many farming clients do Deloittes have ?

Farmers could not afford their fees.

Up
0

I agree with the sentiment towards cutting out the ticket clippers. The meat companies are becoming much more active in procureing store stock to farm out with finishers which I think is a positive. I see no issue with on farm auctions, they help set the market although I personally would baulk at the 5-6% commission. As for it disrupting the flow of information I think thats a minor consideration. If the finishers keep coming back and prepared to pay top dollar then thats feedback enough for most.

 

Meat companies  shoot themselves in the foot by crying foul about middlemen and then useing the very same middlemen to fill their chain when required which is the issue the cockie in the story had.

Up
0