Despite recent floods, bushfires and market uncertainty following China’s recent announcement regarding import restrictions, domestic saleyard prices have remained firm.
Most categories are sitting 110-120c/kg liveweight above the price across the same period last year, supported by strong slaughter volumes and improved northern pasture conditions. The national Female Slaughter Rate has now dipped below the 47 per cent rebuild threshold for the first time since 2025.
ANZ Associate Director Agribusiness Insights Madeleine Swan said the sector was facing a pivotal year.
“Producers face a strategic choice in 2026 – capture value from tightening global supply now or prioritise rebuilding herds after several intense production years. Both pathways have strong market fundamentals behind them,” Ms Swan said.
China’s new 2.6 million‑tonne beef import quota for 2026 – paired with a 55 per cent tariff on out‑of‑quota volumes – marks a structural shift for global exporters.
Australia’s allocation of 205,000 tonnes is below its 2024 market share and represents a material reduction compared with recent export levels. Major exporters including Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and the US will all face constrained access.
The measures align with China’s push toward protein self‑sufficiency, despite ongoing challenges: beef self‑sufficiency has fallen to 68 per cent, consumption has surged 70 per cent over the past decade, and the national herd has dropped 15 per cent in two years. The effectiveness of the quota strategy remains uncertain as economic pressures are already expected to soften consumption in 2026.
Cattle slaughter has begun the year about two per cent higher than 2025, with Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria recording notable increases.
Queensland’s flooding – causing an estimated loss of 50,000 head – has disrupted supply in the north. Forecasts point to national slaughter falling around 3 per cent in 2026 as the herd rebuild gains momentum, supporting prices across the year.
US production is forecast to decline further in 2026, while Brazil may enter its own rebuild phase after rapid expansion. Meanwhile, the United States-Argentina Free Trade Agreement will allow 80,000 tonnes of tariff‑free Argentinian beef into the US, shifting global supply dynamics.