Understand How Weather Impacts Australian Cattle and Lamb Prices

Image of globe focused on Australia

Published: June 17, 2025

Working with the Australian Meat Processor Corporation (AMPC), DecisionNext has released a new research report examining how weather affects Australian cattle and lamb markets. This report comes at a key time, as dry conditions in southern Australia raise concerns about cattle supply and U.S. beef imports.

When the Weather Shifts, So Do the Prices

The report does more than explain why weather matters in a predominantly grass-fed production system. It also quantifies its market impact, from producer decisions to export volumes. Using a mix of economic modeling and statistical analysis, the report demonstrates how weather-driven changes in pasture availability shape herd management, slaughter numbers, and ultimately cut price.

Price Signals Start on the Farm

The findings are particularly valuable for producers, processors, and policymakers. While competition in the meat sector is often viewed through the lens of processor concentration, this research highlights that key dynamics—like production costs and feed availability—start on the farm. In a grass-fed system, these variables can swing prices significantly, long before animals ever reach a processing facility.

Among the report’s key findings:

  • Weather explains 25% of cattle and 22% of lamb price variability in the short run.
  • In grass-fed production, weather can cause up to 40% of cattle price changes.
  • Persistent declines in soil moisture—such as a six-month dry spell—can reduce cattle saleyard prices by around 60c/kg.

Impacts like these stem from a simple economic reality: When feed is scarce or costly, producers often sell animals sooner or cull breeding stock, which boosts supply and lowers prices. On the other hand, plenty of pasture leads to more buying competition, abd that pushes prices up as processors compete for fewer animals.

Translating the Signals into Insights

The research uses data from Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA) and the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) to isolate the most influential weather variables and regions. For cattle, rootzone soil moisture in southern Queensland and northern New South Wales stood out. For lamb, monthly precipitation in southern Victoria and the South Australia Gulf was most explanatory.

By isolating these signals, the report offers a framework for more informed market behavior—whether you’re a buyer trying to manage risk or a policymaker weighing decisions about competition and capacity. And with DecisionNext’s predictive tools at your fingertips, you can stay ahead by making informed pricing and supply decisions—before the market moves.

Explore the full report here, or book a demo today at DecisionNext.com.

You might also like these articles

Image of steak cooking on a grill with Press Release and icon superimposed on top

Greenham USA Partners with DecisionNext to Unlock Predictive Insights in Beef Procurement

SAN FRANCISCO, California – October 22, 2025 – DecisionNext, the leading AI platform for commodity market forecasting and decision support, today announced a new …

Read Article
header image government shut down

USDA Shutdown Leaves Critical Data Gaps in Some Markets but Not All

Key Insights: USDA data flow has abruptly halted due to the federal government shutdown. Core market reports across beef, pork, grains, and oilseeds are paused or …

Read Article
article_header_Hotdog-Index_230308

The DecisionNext Finished Goods Index Report | October 2025

 Figure 1 – Both the Cheeseburger and the Hot Dog Index continue falling from their July highs, expected to level out going into the new year. Key Insights: Hot Dog Index …

Read Article

Sign up for our Newsletter: The Formula

The Formula is DecisionNext’s monthly newsletter for industry insights, product updates, company news and more!

Connect the Dots

Get in touch with us to learn more about our solutions and the work we do.

[ reCAPTCHA widget ]